Human reliability
Template:Short description In the field of human factors and ergonomics, human reliability (also known as human performance or HU) is the probability that a human performs a task to a sufficient standard.[1] Reliability of humans can be affected by many factors such as age, physical health, mental state, attitude, emotions, personal propensity for certain mistakes, and cognitive biases.
Human reliability is important to the resilience of socio-technical systems, and has implications for fields like manufacturing, medicine and nuclear power. Attempts made to decrease human error and increase reliability in human interaction with technology include user-centered design and error-tolerant design.
Factors Affecting Human Performance
Human error, human performance, and human reliability are especially important to consider when work is performed in a complex and high-risk environment.[2]
Strategies for dealing with performance-shaping factors such as psychological stress, cognitive load, fatigue include heuristics and biases such as confirmation bias, availability heuristic, and frequency bias.
Human reliability analysis
A variety of methods exist for human reliability analysis (HRA).[3][4] Two general classes of methods are those based on probabilistic risk assessment (PRA) and those based on a cognitive theory of control.
PRA-based techniques
One method for analyzing human reliability is a straightforward extension of probabilistic risk assessment (PRA): in the same way that equipment can fail in a power plant, so can a human operator commit errors. In both cases, an analysis (functional decomposition for equipment and task analysis for humans) would articulate a level of detail for which failure or error probabilities can be assigned. This basic idea is behind the Technique for Human Error Rate Prediction (THERP).[5] THERP is intended to generate human error probabilities that would be incorporated into a PRA. The Accident Sequence Evaluation Program (ASEP) human reliability procedure is a simplified form of THERP; an associated computational tool is Simplified Human Error Analysis Code (SHEAN).[6] More recently, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission has published the Standardized Plant Analysis Risk – Human Reliability Analysis (SPAR-H) method to take account of the potential for human error.[7][8]
Cognitive control based techniques
Erik Hollnagel has developed this line of thought in his work on the Contextual Control Model (COCOM)[9] and the Cognitive Reliability and Error Analysis Method (CREAM).[10] COCOM models human performance as a set of control modes—strategic (based on long-term planning), tactical (based on procedures), opportunistic (based on present context), and scrambled (random) – and proposes a model of how transitions between these control modes occur. This model of control mode transition consists of a number of factors, including the human operator's estimate of the outcome of the action (success or failure), the time remaining to accomplish the action (adequate or inadequate), and the number of simultaneous goals of the human operator at that time. CREAM is a human reliability analysis method that is based on COCOM.
Related techniques
Related techniques in safety engineering and reliability engineering include failure mode and effects analysis, hazop, fault tree, and SAPHIRE (Systems Analysis Programs for Hands-on Integrated Reliability Evaluations).
Human Factors Analysis and Classification System (HFACS)
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". The Human Factors Analysis and Classification System (HFACS) was developed initially as a framework to understand the role of human error in aviation accidents.[11][12] It is based on James Reason's Swiss cheese model of human error in complex systems. HFACS distinguishes between the "active failures" of unsafe acts, and "latent failures" of preconditions for unsafe acts, unsafe supervision, and organizational influences. These categories were developed empirically on the basis of many aviation accident reports.
"Unsafe acts" are performed by the human operator "on the front line" (e.g., the pilot, the air traffic controller, or the driver). Unsafe acts can be either errors (in perception, decision making or skill-based performance) or violations. Violations, or the deliberate disregard for rules and procedures, can be routine or exceptional. Routine violations occur habitually and are usually tolerated by the organization or authority. Exceptional violations are unusual and often extreme. For example, driving 60 mph in a 55-mph speed limit zone is a routine violation, while driving 130 mph in the same zone is exceptional.
There are two types of preconditions for unsafe acts: those that relate to the human operator's internal state and those that relate to the human operator's practices or ways of working. Adverse internal states include those related to physiology (e.g., illness) and mental state (e.g., mentally fatigued, distracted). A third aspect of 'internal state' is really a mismatch between the operator's ability and the task demands. Four types of unsafe supervision are: inadequate supervision; planned inappropriate operations; failure to correct a known problem; and supervisory violations.
Organizational influences include those related to resources management (e.g., inadequate human or financial resources), organizational climate (structures, policies, and culture), and organizational processes (such as procedures, schedules, oversight).
See also
- Template:Annotated link
- Template:Annotated link (A Technique for Human Event Analysis)
- Template:Annotated link, a technique used in the field of human reliability
- Template:Annotated link
- Template:Annotated link
- Template:Annotated link
- Template:Annotated link (Tecnica Empirica Stima Errori Operatori)
- Incident pit, conceptual model from diving for explaining incident development and recovery
- Success Likelihood Index Method
Footnotes
References
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- Federal Aviation Administration. 2009 electronic code of regulations. Retrieved September 25, 2009, from https://web.archive.org/web/20120206214308/http://www.airweb.faa.gov/Regulatory_and_Guidance_library/rgMakeModel.nsf/0/5a9adccea6c0c4e286256d3900494a77/$FILE/H3WE.pdf
Further reading
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- CCPS, Guidelines for Preventing Human Error. This book explains about qualitative and quantitative methodology for predicting human error. Qualitative methodology called SPEAR: Systems for Predicting Human Error and Recovery, and quantitative methodology also includes THERP, etc.
External links
Standards and guidance documents
- IEEE Standard 1082 (1997): IEEE Guide for Incorporating Human Action Reliability Analysis for Nuclear Power Generating Stations
- DOE Standard DOE-HDBK-1028-2009 : Human Performance Improvement Handbook
Tools
- EPRI HRA Calculator
- Eurocontrol Human Error Tools
- RiskSpectrum HRA software
- Simplified Human Error Analysis Code
Research labs
- Erik Hollnagel at the Crisis and Risk Research Centre at MINES ParisTech
- Human Reliability Analysis Template:Webarchive at the US Sandia National Laboratories
- Center for Human Reliability Studies at the US Oak Ridge National Laboratory
- Flight Cognition Laboratory at NASA Ames Research Center
- David Woods at the Cognitive Systems Engineering Laboratory at The Ohio State University
- Sidney Dekker's Leonardo da Vinci Laboratory for Complexity and Systems Thinking, Lund University, Sweden
Media coverage
- “How to Avoid Human Error in IT“ Template:Webarchive
- “Human Reliability. We break down just like machines“ Industrial Engineer – November 2004, 36(11): 66
Networking
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ https://www.standards.doe.gov/standards-documents/1000/1028-BHdbk-2009-v1/@@images/file DOE-HDBK-1028-2009
- ↑ Kirwan and Ainsworth, 1992
- ↑ Kirwan, 1994
- ↑ Swain & Guttmann, 1983
- ↑ Simplified Human Error Analysis Code (Wilson, 1993)
- ↑ SPAR-H
- ↑ Gertman et al., 2005
- ↑ (Hollnagel, 1993)
- ↑ (Hollnagel, 1998)
- ↑ Shappell and Wiegmann, 2000
- ↑ Wiegmann and Shappell, 2003