Citation:
Wen-Chin Li and Don Harris, The evaluation of the decision making processes employed by cadet pilots following a short aeronautical decision-making training program. International Journal of Applied Aviation Studies, 2006, Vol 6(2), p315-333
Abstract:
Many aeronautical decision-making (ADM) mnemonic-based methods exist.
However, there is no empirical research that suggests that they are actually
effective in improving decision-making. Klein (1993), in his study of
naturalistic decision making suggested that the decision-making process
centers around two processes; situation assessment to generate a plausible
course of action and mental simulation to evaluate that course of action for
risk management. In this study a short, ADM training course was constructed
around two mnemonic methods, SHOR (Stimuli, Hypotheses, Options, and Response)
and DESIDE (Detect, Estimate, Set safety objectives, Identify, Do, Evaluate).
Forty-one pilots from the Republic of China Tactical Training Wing
participated: half received a short ADM training course and half did not.
After training, the procedural knowledge underpinning their Situation
Assessment and Risk Management ability, two skills essential for successful
decision-making, were evaluated using pencil and paper-based knowledge tests
based upon several demanding tactical flight situations. These scenarios
were designed to encompass the six basic types of decision making described
by Orasanu (1993); go/no go decisions; recognition-primed decisions; response
selection decisions; resource management decisions; non-diagnostic
procedural decisions, and decisions requiring creative problem-solving. The
results show gains attributable to the decision making training course in
both situation assessment and risk management skills. The results strongly
suggest that ADM is trainable and such a training course is effective in
improving the bases of in-flight decision-making.