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FAA Office of Aerospace Medicine
Civil Aerospace Medical Institute
PUBLICATIONS
AVIATION MEDICINE REPORTS


Report No: DOT/FAA/AM-00/4

Title and Subtitle: Enhancing GPS receiver certification by examining pilot-performance databases.

Report Date: February 2000

Authors: Joseph, K.M., and Jahns, D.W.

Abstract: The rapid introduction of Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers for airborne navigation has outpaced the capacity of international aviation authorities to resolve human factors issues that concern safe and efficient use of such devices. Current certification technical standards appear to have had little impact on promoting the design of standardized receiver architectures, interfaces and operating manuals- despite evidence from a variety of sources that lack of standardization may undermine safety. This paper explores the relationship between existing human factors data relevant to GPS-interface design and incident/accident databases, which are a rich source of information and serve to highlight the safety-critical nature of GPS-receiver interface issues. An approach to expanding the role of human factors assessments in the certification of GPS receivers is briefly summarized.

Key Words: GPS Receivers, Certification, Human Factors, General Aviation

No. of Pages: 11

Updated: 12:06 pm ET June 8, 2005