Title :
A roadmap for safer-systems engineering
Author :
Johnson, C.W. ; Holloway, C.M.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK
Abstract :
The increasing complexity of safety-critical applications has led to the introduction of decision support tools in the transportation and process industries. Automation has also been introduced to support operator intervention in safety-critical applications. These innovations help reduce overall operator workload, and filter application data to maximise the finite cognitive and perceptual resources of system operators. However, these benefits do not come without a cost. Increased computational support for the end-users of safety critical applications leads to increased reliance on engineers to monitor and maintain automated systems and decision support tools. This paper argues that by focussing on the end users of complex applications, previous research has tended to neglect the demands that are being placed on systems engineers. The argument is illustrated through discussing three recent accidents. The paper concludes by presenting a possible strategy for building and using highly automated systems based on increased attention by management and regulators, improvements in competency and training for technical staff, sustained support for engineering team resource management, and the development of incident reporting systems for infrastructure failures. This paper represents preliminary work, about which we seek comments and suggestions.
Keywords :
decision support systems; factory automation; failure analysis; industrial accidents; industrial training; manufacturing industries; occupational safety; systems engineering; transportation; accidents; automation; decision support tools; engineering team resource management; incident reporting systems; infrastructure failures; operator workload; process industries; safer systems engineering; safety critical applications; technical staff competency; technical staff training; transportation industries; air traffic management; engineering; human factors; safety-critical systems; systems;
Conference_Titel :
System Safety, 2011 6th IET International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Birmingham
DOI :
10.1049/cp.2011.0248