What is on your mind? Using the perceptual cycle model and critical decision method to understand the decision-making process in the cockpit
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LDR | 00000cab a2200000 4500 | ||
001 | MAP20130032627 | ||
003 | MAP | ||
005 | 20131008170707.0 | ||
008 | 131008e20130805esp|||p |0|||b|spa d | ||
040 | $aMAP$bspa$dMAP | ||
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100 | 1 | $0MAPA20130003856$aPlant, Katherine L. | |
245 | 1 | 0 | $aWhat is on your mind? Using the perceptual cycle model and critical decision method to understand the decision-making process in the cockpit$cKatherine L. Plant, Neville A. Stanton |
520 | $aAeronautical decision-making is complex as there is not always a clear coupling between the decision made and decision outcome. As such, there is a call for process-orientated decision research in order to understand why a decision made sense at the time it was made. Schema theory explains how we interact with the world using stored mental representations and forms an integral part of the perceptual cycle model (PCM); proposed here as a way to understand the decision-making process. This paper qualitatively analyses data from the critical decision method (CDM) based on the principles of the PCM. It is demonstrated that the approach can be used to understand a decision-making process and highlights how influential schemata can be at informing decision-making. The reliability of this approach is established, the general applicability is discussed and directions for future work are considered. | ||
773 | 0 | $wMAP20100019818$tErgonomics : the international journal of research and practice in human factors and ergonomics$dOxon [United Kingdom] : Taylor & Francis, 2010-$x0014-0139$g05/08/2013 Volumen 56 Número 8 - agosto 2013 , p. 1232-1250 |