1 / 22

The Psychology of ‘Human Error’: Why do people get things wrong?

The Psychology of ‘Human Error’: Why do people get things wrong?. Claire Philp. Risk Management Consultancy. Midlands. Health & Safety, Physical Ergonomics, Usability. ‘Human error’ – what do we mean?. Definition. “ people operating within our systems in a way which we do not desire ”.

kele
Télécharger la présentation

The Psychology of ‘Human Error’: Why do people get things wrong?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Psychology of ‘Human Error’:Why do people get things wrong? Claire Philp

  2. Risk Management Consultancy Midlands Health & Safety, Physical Ergonomics, Usability

  3. ‘Human error’ – what do we mean?

  4. Definition “people operating within our systems in a way which we do not desire”

  5. Charlie – a case study

  6. The ‘Human Error’ problem ‘Human error’ provides the public with a simple headline to draw a line underneath major disasters But beneath this banner the lessons and the subtleties are lost Despite the well-documented problems with the use of the term, ’human error’ doesn’t seem to be going anywhere fast

  7. How do we talk to clients about ‘Human Error?’ We need to maximise organisational learning Organisations need to respond appropriately We need to move the focus away from blame We need to drive behaviour change

  8. Let’s play a game • You are in an area where wearing a high visibility jacket is mandatory • You see someone in the area not wearing a jacket • Why?

  9. Slips/Lapses • I knew the rule • I didn’t intend to break the rule • Something went wrong

  10. Knowledge-based errors • I didn’t know the rule • Or I thought I knew the rule but I was wrong • Or I applied the wrong rule in this circumstance • I didn’t intend to break the rule

  11. Violations • I knew the rule • I intentionally broke the rule

  12. Error categorisation Adapted from Rasmussen and Reason’s categories Small number of categories Simple language

  13. Human error and accident investigation Understanding human error is important in accident investigation We expect managers to make sound judgements We are all susceptible to conscious and unconscious biases A lack of understanding compounds this

  14. Examples of Biases Hindsight bias - once you know the outcome, the failures are obvious and seem avoidable Confirmation bias – if you investigate with a pre-formed idea of what you think happened, you will only notice the evidence that supports that idea Attribution bias – overemphasising personality factors in others’ mistakes and underemphasising situational factors (vice versa when looking at their own mistakes) Availability bias - certain vivid memories, experiences, facts come to mind more easily to drive our decision making

  15. …And more Anchoring Gambler’s fallacy Primacy, recency and serial effects Sunk cost effect Heuristics Tacit knowledge

  16. Why is this important? A simple tool so that anyone can improve their understanding beyond the term ‘human error’ Appropriate responses and controls vary by error ’type’ Tool enhances the way managers approach non-compliance More effective responses drive behavioural change in employees

  17. More effective accident investigation With a simple framework for identifying types of errors and responding appropriately, our investigations are less vulnerable to the biases of the investigator

  18. Thank you Any questions?

More Related