Effects of Video Weather Training Products, Web-Based Preflight Weather Briefing, and Local Versus Non-Local Pilots on General Aviation Pilot Weather Knowledge and Flight Behavior, Phase 3

Abstract

The primary purpose of Phases 1 and 2 of this research was to test the effects of video weather training products on weather-related risk-taking. During the investigation, two unexpected observations were made: (1) Despite specific instructions to fly visual-flight-rules-only (VFR), nine of 50 Phase 1 pilots spent more than 10 min in simulated instrument meteorological conditions (IMC), plus three of those nine repeated that behavior in Phase 2; (2) Whole-group (N=50) weather knowledge test scores were significantly lower (19%, p<.001) than average FAA certification exam scores obtained by freshly licensed pilots, implying knowledge decay over time. To assess if any of the IMC violations were willful (rather than inadvertent), we sent a brief questionnaire to the nine pilots of interest. Five responded. After analysis, the leading explanation seemed that their flight profiles were consistent with preflight terrain avoidance planning (TAP). These pilots seemed determined to fly straight and level above the highest known obstacle, even if that obstacle was distant and TAP altitude meant flying initial VFR-into-IMC. The average group decline in certification exam scores was equally significant from a logical standpoint. Since knowledge retention tends to be a function of knowledge relevancy, if FAA test questions were uniformly relevant to real-world weather encounters, we would expect pilots' scores to increase with experience, not decrease. Since experience tends to increase with time, this should offset the normal decay process of forgetting. However, this study shows that it did not. This was consistent with pilot anecdotes that FAA test questions often seemed, to them, "trick questions," or otherwise based on tasks that pilots rarely do and conditions rarely encountered.

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Nov 01, 2010
Accession Number
ADA534861

Entities

People

  • Michael Lenz
  • William R. Knecht

Organizations

  • Federal Aviation Administration

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Aerospace Medicine
  • Altitude
  • Binomials
  • Electronic Mail
  • Flight
  • Flight Training
  • Frequency
  • Human Behavior
  • Information Exchange
  • Instructions
  • Pilots
  • Simulators
  • Standards
  • Statistics
  • Terrain Avoidance
  • Training
  • Visual Flight Rules

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Aviation Science / Aeronautics.
  • Mathematics or Statistics
  • Systems Analysis and Design