The companion piece is also fascinating
http://www.flightglobal.com/article...ous-flaws-in-pilot-training-for-handling.html[
Despite the sometimes fickle nature of the automation, she observes, pilots frequently abdicate too much responsibility to automated systems.
The reasons for this, she found, include: a perceived lack of trust in pilot performance by the airline; policies that encourage use of automated systems rather than manual operations; and insufficient training, experience or judgment, the result of which is that "pilots may not be prepared to handle non-routine situations".
Abbott has discovered particular vulnerabilities in automated systems and their man/machine interfaces. These include: mode confusion, and a pilot tendency to use information from automated systems instead of raw data. Another problem she identified is that much of the information supplied to pilots is, itself, automated - what she calls "information automation". Abbot also found that there was no consistency among operators in their policies for the use of automated systems.
Pilot knowledge was found seriously lacking in many areas relating to automated systems, including: understanding of flight director, autopilot, autothrottle/autothrust, and flight management system/computer systems and their limitations; operating procedures, mode transitions and behaviour; and unusual attitude recognition and recovery.
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I dont know if there is an easy answer. It gets harder and harder to overcome our recipe flying conditioning that is beaten into us to a greater degree every year by an liability adverse yet cost-cutting industry, and a regulatory body that is becoming irrelevant with its SOP nit-picking myopia that causes it to ignore some of the big issues.
I can only hope that if it happens to me, I will be able to use the SOP as needed, but shake off all the "did I do this checklist/callout/profile/ ect exactly the way the LCA, company, FAA or whoever wants it done" and remember to bust any SOP, limitation or clearance needed to allow me to miss everything hard and imovable by an inch or more and find a place to put down without hurting anyone.
I hope that my pre- 121 experience kicks in and helps me rise above the habits and routines that 121 has put in me.