Aerospace psychology
Aerospace psychology is a branch of [psychology] that studies psychological aspects of aviation, increasing efficiency improving selection of applicants for occupations, identification of psychological causes of aircraft accidents, and application of cognitive psychology to understand human behaviors, actions, cognitive and emotional processes in aviation, and interaction between employees. Aviation psychology originated at the beginning of the 1920s with the development of aviation medicine and work psychology in the USSR, Human separation from earth leads to a drastic change in spatial orientation; accelerations, drops in barometric pressure, changes in atmosphc composition, can have a substantial effect on the nervous system, and requires uninterrupted concentration and rapid decisions. Currently, research in aviation psychology develops within the framework of engineering psychology.[1][2][3]
Publications
The International Journal of Aerospace Psychology (2017 - current), formerly known as The International Journal of Aviation Psychology (1900-2016) is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal covering research on the "development and management of efficient aviation systems from the standpoint of the human operators." It integrates disciplines of engineering and computer science, psychology, education, and physiology. published by Taylor and Francis, edited by the Association of Aviation Psychology.[4]
See also
References
- "Definition".
- Wickens, Christopher D. (1999). "Aerospace Psychology". Human Performance and Ergonomics. pp. 195–242. doi:10.1016/B978-012322735-5/50009-9. ISBN 9780123227355.
- "aviationknowledge".
- "Tandofonline".