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FrontPage > AeroSafety World > AeroSafety World July-August 2017 > Rethinking the Briefing
FLIGHT DECK
Rethinking the Briefing
Alaska Airlines revamps approach and departure briefings to focus on flight-specific threats.
by Rich Loudon and David Moriarty | August 24, 2017
On Aug. 14, 2013, an Airbus A300-600 freighter experienced a controlled flight into terrain (CFIT) fatal
accident during a localizer non-precision approach to Runway 18 at Birmingham (Alabama, U.S.)
Shuttlesworth International Airport ("False Expectations," ASW, Feb. 2015). The National Transportation
Safety Board ultimately concluded that pilot error, specifically “the flight crew’s continuation of an
unstabilized approach and their failure to monitor the aircraft's altitude during the approach’ was the
probable cause of the crash, which killed both crewmembers and destroyed the airplane.
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The cockpit voice recorder revealed a haunting revelation about the content of the crew's arrival briefing — it
was perfect. Or was it? There was certainly a lot of talking by the pilot flying (PF) as he dutifully “ticked all the
required boxes,” but no discussion regarding the relevant threats or countermeasures that could have averted
disaster. The fatigued crew chose to fly a seldom performed, non-precision approach at night to a short
runway with limited lighting; the weather forecast suggested an unpredictable cloud ceiling. This is one more
example of an all-too-common thread in recent industry accidents: the loss of flight path and situational
awareness due to onset of high crew workload as a result of rapidly changing conditions.
We have spoken to numerous U.S. and international air carriers about the content of their departure and
arrival briefings and have found most to be strikingly similar. The commonality is a decades-old briefing
method that has neither adapted to next generation flight decks nor incorporated breakthroughs in our
understanding of human cognition. Today's typical standard operating procedure (SOP) briefing is simply too
long (due to years of adding more and more items determined to be "too important not to discuss”)
Additionally, briefings have become one-size-fits-all solutions serving as repositories for redundant verbal
crew crosschecks of highly automated, highly reliable systems. Finally, too often they are one-sided
conversations that lack involvement from the crewmember that recent industry accident trends indicate will
play a primary role in maintaining safety margins: the pilot monitoring (PM).
: ~
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UPS Flight 1384
After the Birmingham accident, Alaska Airlines reviewed its departure and arrival briefings and found they
were equally inadequate. As a result, we decided to conduct a comprehensive study of our crew briefings that
started with a review of our voluntary safety data (advanced qualification program, aviation safety action
program, flight operational quality assurance, and line operations safety audit [LOSA). We wanted to see if
‘we could find a link between the content of our own lengthy, one-sided, “box checking” type briefing and the
safety deficiencies noted in the data. What we found was astonishing. There was not only a clear connection
between crew errors and undesired aircraft states with the quality and content of the briefings that preceded
them, but also a disconnect between our SOP briefing requirements and line pilot adherence to those
requirements. Our analysts advised us that we either had bad pilots or bad policy. We believed it was the
latter. Our briefings, like so many in the aviation industry (as shown in the LOSA archive), had become so
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overloaded and were so often conducted by rote that many crews were either choosing not to adhere to the
seemingly irrelevant policy or they dutifully followed it, only to find out later, through debriefing, that what they
spent so much time briefing wasn't focused on or directed toward what they should have been briefing
Briefing Better
Itis time to rethink the way we brief — not only to address these issues but also to create a methodology that
incorporates recent breakthroughs in cognitive theory regarding decision making in the very environments
that are proving to be so challenging for pilots. After a year of research and development, we came up with
four goals for our briefings:
+ Threat forward. Following the law of primacy (that information presented first is better retained), crew departure and
arrival briefings should first address the relevant threats to the flight and go on to discuss specific countermeasures
that could be employed should any of those threats degrade safety margins. An additional benefit of a threat:
forward briefing is that in identifying relevant threats early in the briefing, those threats tend to positively inform the
subsequent departure or arrival plan.
+ Interactive. The briefing design should encourage interaction between the PF and PM. Itis time to put away the age-
old notion of “my leg, your leg." The desired goal should be an “our leg” mindset where the PM plays a leadership
role in developing critical content of the briefing. Afterall, industry accident data continue to reveal that itis the PM
who will play a significant role in noticing and re-establishing safety margins should they deteriorate,
+ Scalable, Just as no two departures or arrivals are the same, neither should be the briefings that precede them. Yet
on today’s modern flight decks, crews are required to go through the same litany of items for each flight leg. Crew
briefings need to be scalable. Professional aviators know how to discern what is important based on proficiency,
familiarity, fight complexity and a host of other factors that may or may not be relevant at the time
+ Cognitive. Finally, following the principle of recency (that information presented last also is well retained), crew
departure and arrival briefings should conclude with a recap of the critical threats and associated countermeasures,
as well as specific PM duties for each particular departure or arrival. Why is this so important? Cognitive
psychologist Gary Klein, Ph.D,, a leading researcher in recognition-primed decision-making theory, has determined
that professions requiring rapid decision making in high workload environments subject to rapidly changing
conditions (ie, fire-fighting, law enforcement, the military and aviation), will involve decisions based on recognition-
primed pattern-matching. A pattern-match, according to Klein, is an action that is derived from relevant cues,
expectancies and goals. These cues, expectations and goals normally will be a result of insights and expertise
gained through specific training or routines, professional study, deliberate practice, or overall experience. In very rare
cases such as Capt. Chesley Sullenberger’s “miracle on the Hudson,” (US Airways Flight 1549) experts will seek a
pattern-match that is “close enough” because the situation is unfamiliar to them, requiring some level of
improvisation. In any case, a successful outcome will require an appropriate pattern-match. For this reason, fight
crews should brief in a manner that will serve to prime them with potential patten-matches. Once these pattern-
‘matches and the cues that should elicit them have been mentally primed, itis a lot more likely that when an
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abnormal situation arises, the crew will be able to trigger these pattern-match-based responses quickly and
accurately.
Set-Up and Brief (T-P-C)
In order to incorporate these four goals, we came up with a better way for crews to prepare for departures
and arrivals. First, they perform a setup. The set-up is a very specific, deliberate process in which both the PF
and PM take time, normally without discussion, to ensure all required and applicable items are ready to go.
‘These include a review of the weather, applicable notices to airmen, set-up of their electronic flight bags,
instrument panels, navigational guidance and appropriate crosschecks [e.g., automatically uploaded
departure or arrival waypoints in the flight management computer). The reason for a “silent” set-up is that we
only want crews actually discussing relevant items that may affect safety. We found no data to support the
fact that a verbal crew crosscheck of automatically loaded systems is necessary. Though that might have
been important when a system was first introduced, after many years of improvement and proven reliability, a
verbal review is no longer needed. Knowing what we now know about the importance of priming and pattern-
matching, we are convinced that every word crews speak during a briefing is critical and potentially life-
savtocing.
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4 DEPARTURE BRIEFING
Threats (PM, PF)
Blan
= Taxi, Dept Ry
~ Route (Clearance/Flight Plan — FMC RTE crosscheck)
= Return (emerg, T/O all)
- TIO pert valid, pert/contig issues
Considerations
- Any spocific PM duties, other considerations
= Recap as needed
A APPROACH BRIEFING
Threats (PM, PF)
Plan
~ Rute (STAR, Approach, Approach Mods, MIA, Al Ket
rout
- Lnd Rwy, Assessment, LTP, Exit, Taxi
- Autobrakes
- Flaps, VREF, Target Speed
Considerations
= Any specific PM duties, other considerations
~ Recap as needed
DEBRIEF
To improve performance:
1. How do you think that went?
Note: Debrief both excellent performance and areas to improve.
2. If we could do it again, what would we do differently?
3.Are there any reports to complete/submit?
Re Geeta WEsy
AirportvRunway ATC Aircraft
Contamination —Cinc/Re-Routes__ Systems
Construction Arr/Dep amendts MELs
Hotspots RAW Changes Automation
Airline/Ops/ Performance
Dispatch Ground/Ramp/
19 ‘Sched Pressure MX
Winds Delays Handling
Precipitation Paperwork Congestion
Environment —_Physiology Logbook
Terrain Fatigue onset Cabin
Night Stress Passengers
Traffic Hydration Interruptions
Nutrition
Briefing reference card
Once both crewmembers are set up, the newly devised "T-P-C" (threats-plan-considerations) briefing begins
with the PF asking the PM to review any relevant threats that might be anticipated. By requiring the PM to
begin the discussion in this manner, a level of ownership and interactive engagement is fostered. The PM
must take time to prepare an answer to the inevitable question that will start the briefing: What are our
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threats? The crew will then discuss and decide on countermeasures for each relevant threat identified. We
provide our crews with a quick reference card that includes a summary of the briefing format, a tool for
conducting debriefs, and a list of common threats as a memory jogger. On complex, high-risk departures and
arrivals, the threat portion of the briefing can be the most significant and lengthy component of the overall
discussion
Next comes the PF’s plan. There was considerable debate over what should be included in the plan, as we did
not want to revert to the long, drawn out list of the required items that we were trying to revise. (This is an
each respective airline will have to perform in the process of deciding what guidance to include.)
Like briefing threats, however, the plan portion should be relevance-based, and scaled up or scaled down
appropriately. if a crew is about to perform its 10th arrival and visual approach in the same sunny conditions
to an airport to which they have been flying all month, then the discussion will normally be appropriately
scaled down due to high proficiency, familiarity and low risk. f, on the other hand, there exists low familiarity
exert
and high risk, then much more detail is required.
Finally, the considerations portion of the briefing is intended to be a recap or summary of the discussion. It is
particularly important if the briefing has been scaled up due to a combination of high risk and complexity. A
review of specific PM duties will serve to prime the PF and PM for action should any relevant threats require
the agreed-upon countermeasure(s).
The Rollout
The most frequent questions we are asked are, "How did you get your flight operations leadership to buy off
on such a big change to your SOP?" and "How did you go about communicating the change to your pilots?”
‘The answer to the first question is easy: We showed them the voluntary safety data and proposed a solution
that was more in line with what crews were actually doing and one that incorporated human factors science.
Regarding the second question, we spent considerable effort communicating the need for a change several
months in advance. We then developed a robust training module, including video examples and, more
importantly, emphasizing the why behind the change. On the day of the rollout, numerous flight oper:
leaders were available at each domicile to ensure a smooth transition and answer any lingering questions
Several months after the rollout, we conducted a fleet-wide survey to obtain feedback on how well the change
was being incorporated and to learn how it could have been better trained and implemented. The entire
process received an 84 percent approval rating.
ns.
Autonomy, Mastery and Purpose
It is time to unshackle our line crews from the decades-old required list of briefing items. As Dan Pink said in
his New York Times bestseller, Drive — The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us, “Carrots and sticks are
so last century, For 21st-century work, we need to upgrade to autonomy, mastery and purpose.” The brief-
htps:ightsafety orglasw-artclerethinking-the-briefing! as