Inicio  /  Aerospace  /  Vol: 5 Núm: 2 Par: June (2018)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Differences in Risk Perception Factors and Behaviours amongst and within Professionals and Trainees in the Aviation Engineering Domain

Dimitrios Chionis and Nektarios Karanikas    

Resumen

In the aviation sector, the variability in the appreciation of safety risk perception factors and responses to risk behaviours has not been sufficiently studied for engineers and technicians. Through a questionnaire survey, this study investigated differences amongst professionals and trainees across eleven risk perception factors and five indicative risk behaviour scenarios. The findings indicated significant differences between the two groups in four factors and three scenarios as well as within groups. Moreover, age, years of work and study and educational level were other factors accounting for such differences within each group of professionals and trainees. The results showing these significant differences are aligned with relevant research about pilots and indicate that the appreciation of risk perception factors by aviation engineers and the development of their risk behaviours deserves more attention. Our findings cannot be generalised due to the small sample and its distribution across the demographic variables. However, the results of this study suggest the need tailoring risk communication and training to address the different degrees to which influences of risk perception factors are comprehended, and risk behaviours emerge in aviation engineering trainees and professionals. Further research could focus on the development of a respective uniform framework and tool for the specific workforce group and could administer surveys to more extensive and more representative samples by including open-ended questions and broader social, organisational and systemic factors.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Polona Tominc, Dijana Ore?ki, Vesna Cancer and Maja Ro?man    
Background: This article delves into an in-depth analysis of the statistically significant differences in AI support levels for project management between SMEs and large enterprises. The research was conducted based on a comprehensive survey encompassing... ver más
Revista: AI

 
Lichao Sun, Yunyun Dong, Shuang Xu, Xiufang Feng and Xiaole Fan    
Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and Kirsten rat sarcoma (KRAS) are the most common driver genes in non-small cell lung cancer patients. However, frequent gene mutation testing raises a potential risk of cancer metastasis. In our paper, a Mut-SeRe... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Cato Sandford, Chris Malins and Calliope Panoutsou    
The ?low indirect land use change risk? (?low ILUC-risk?) concept was developed to assess whether crop-based biofuels would compete with other land uses and cause the expansion of agricultural land. At the core of low ILUC-risk is an ?additionality princ... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Tetsunori Inoue and Isamu Fujita    
Large amounts of pumice stone generated by the submarine volcanic eruption at Fukutoku Okanoba on 13 August 2021 drifted ashore, affecting ship navigation and fishery operations and posing challenges for disposal and a risk to benthic sea-life. As a new ... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Evi Vinck, Birgit De Bock, Tom Wambecq, Els Liekens and Rosalia Delgado    
Stormwater runoff is often discharged untreated into receiving waters, a process that is widely recognized as a threat to water quality. To protect water bodies, tools are needed to assess the risk of urban runoff pollution. In this work, a new tool is p... ver más
Revista: Water