Was it technical failure or human error?
In this video we introduce the roots of the dualistic question whether an accident was caused by either technical failure or human error. We trace it to H.W. Heinrich and his book on Industrial Accident Prevention from 1931 and see how its reasoning has shaped safety research, policy and discourse ever since. In this video we also play around a bit more with animations than we have in our previous videos. Please give us a comment below on how you like it. Find out more about our MSc programme or one-week learning labs at www.humanfactors.lth.se

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Zero Suicide Sidney Dekker: Understanding human error

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Baseline vs. Anomaly: The Secret Skill for Spotting Danger Early (OODA Series – Episode 4)

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What Is Error and Types of Errors in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI)

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Process Accident - Inadequate Isolation during Reactor Cleaning

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Lecture 14: Human Factors

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Why Aren't Dangerous Drivers Punished?

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Introduction to errors and violations

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Being Human

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Three analytical traps in accident investigation

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Reason explains Swiss Cheese Model

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Velocity 2012: Richard Cook, "How Complex Systems Fail"

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Convergence Of Safety Culture And Lean: Lessons From The Leaders

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Aurion Learning - Human Factors Awareness - The Need for Human factors - Efficiency -- English

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Human Error Reduction

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How can we learn from human error? | Ivan Pupulidy, PhD | TEDxABQSalon

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Human Factor Approach To Accident Investigation At Sea | Capt. Daniel Alcantara | TEDxRedhill

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The Swiss Cheese Model of Accident Causation

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Two views on Human Error

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WEBINAR - Human Failures - What are and how can we minimise the associated risk?

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