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The Creation of a New Minor Event Coding System

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Abstract:

The present study began with an assessment of the reliability and usefulness of an existing minor event coding system in a British ‘high-consequence’ industry. It was discovered that despite the fact that the system produced replicable data, when tested in a reliability trial the causal inferences it was producing failed to meet the normal criteria for statistical reliability. It was therefore felt necessary to create a new model of the human factors component of action in this industry, from which a model of human factors error in the same industry could be inferred. A set of codes (to facilitate statistical analysis) were deduced from this last, which were then tested in a new reliability trial. The results from this trial were very encouraging, and after a six-month pilot study in which it demonstrated its usefulness as a trend and patterning tool, the system is now being phased in within this industry.

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Wallace, B., Ross, A., Davies, J. et al. The Creation of a New Minor Event Coding System. Cognition Tech Work 4, 1–8 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1007/s101110200000

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s101110200000

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