Lion Air crash sheds light on dark side of cockpit
automation
As Boeing was developing its latest version of the 737 airliner, it
discovered the design was slightly more prone to a loss of control. So the
company added a computer-driven safety feature -- one that is now a focus of the
investigation into a fatal crash last month near Indonesia.
If preliminary findings are borne out, the Oct. 29 crash of the Lion
Air 737 Max 8 may end up being one of a number of cases in which the cockpit
automation that's made flying safer also had the unintended consequence of
confusing pilots and contributing to tragedy.
For decades, planemakers have been adding automated systems to help
pilots set engine thrust, navigate with higher precision and even override the
humans in the cockpit if they make mistakes. Airline disasters have become
increasingly rare as a result, but automation-related crashes have become a
growing share of the few that continue to occur, according to government studies
and accident reports.
"There's no question that automation has been a tremendous boon to
safety in commercial aviation," said Steve Wallace, who served as the chief
accident investigator for the Federal Aviation Administration. "At the same
time, there have been many accidents where automation was cited as a
factor."
A 2013 report by the FAA found more than 60 percent of 26 accidents
over a decade involved pilots making errors after automated systems abruptly
shut down or behaved in unexpected ways.
For example, pilots on Air France Flight 447 inexplicably made abrupt
movements and lost control of their Airbus SE A330 over the Atlantic Ocean in
2009 after they lost their airspeed readings and the plane's automated flight
protections disconnected. All 228 people on board died.
The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board concluded that pilots
of an Asiana Airlines Boeing 777-200ER that struck a seawall in San Francisco in
2013 while trying to land, killing three, didn't realize they'd shut off their
automatic speed control system in part because it wasn't properly
documented.
Pilots on Lion Air Flight 610 were battling multiple failures in the
minutes after they took off from Jakarta on the early morning flight, according
to Indonesia's National Transportation Safety Committee. The pilots had asked to
return to land as they dealt with the issues, but plunged into the Java Sea at
high speed before they could get back, according to investigators. All 189
people aboard were killed.
Data from the recovered flight recorder shows that the Max's new
safety feature, known as Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System, was
triggered. An errant sensor signaled that the plane was in danger of stalling
and prompted the MCAS to compensate by repeatedly sending the plane into a
dive.
The pilots counteracted it repeatedly by flipping a switch to raise
the nose manually, which temporarily disabled MCAS. The cycle repeated itself
more than two dozen times before the plane entered it's final dive, according to
flight data.
This occurred as multiple other systems were malfunctioning or
issuing cockpit warnings. Most notably, the cockpit was permeated by the loud
thumping sound of a device on the captain's side of the cockpit known as a stick
shaker, which is designed to warn the pilots they are in danger of losing lift
on their wings. The stick shaker was erroneous too, prompted by the same false
readings from the sensor.
Boeing didn't respond to a request for comment on its automation, but
has previously stressed that a procedure that pilots train for should have
overcome the malfunction.
"Boeing is taking every measure to fully understand all aspects of
this accident, working closely with the U.S. National Transportation Safety
Board as technical advisers to support the NTSC as the investigation continues,"
the aircraft maker said in an earlier statement.
Airline accidents almost never occur from a single cause and
preliminary information from the investigation suggests multiple factors were at
work in the fatal Lion Air flight.
While maintenance and pilot training may be found to be more
significant, the underlying issue with an automation system behaving in
unexpected ways puts the accident in a now-common category.
Planemakers have been adding more automation to help pilots avoid
errors as aviation technology has become increasingly
sophisticated.
At Airbus, flight computers oversee pilots' control inputs on models
built since the late 1980s and won't allow steep dives or turns deemed unsafe.
Boeing's philosophy has been to leave more authority in the hands of pilots, but
newer designs include some computerized limits and, like Airbus, its aircraft
are equipped with sophisticated autopilots and systems to set speed during
landings, among other functions.
The new feature on the 737 Max family of aircraft was designed to
address one of the most common remaining killers in commercial aviation. By
nudging the plane nose down in certain situations, the MCAS software lowers the
chances of an aerodynamic stall and a loss of control. Loss-of-control accidents
killed 1,131 people from 2008 through 2017, by far the biggest category,
according to Boeing statistics.
This type of automation is credited with helping create the
unprecedented safety improvements of recent decades, yet it hasn't been
perfect.
"A lot of the experts have commented that human beings are not very
good at monitoring machines," said Roger Cox, a former NTSB investigator who
specialized in pilot actions. "The reverse is better. Machines are pretty good
at monitoring human beings."
Devices that offer relatively simple warnings of an impending mid-air
collision, for example, have proven nearly fool proof. On the other hand, more
complex systems that aid pilots but require human oversight have on rare
occasions confused crews and led to crashes.
It's also important to keep in mind that issues with automation can
be exacerbated by pilot actions, Cox said.
"Often times, what we call an automation error is really a
proficiency error or a lack-of-attention error, and not fundamentally a fault of
the automation," he said.
Indeed, the pilots in the Lion Air crash didn't follow an emergency
procedure that could have deactivated MCAS and allowed them to fly normally,
according to investigators. A different pilot crew the night before the accident
had effectively shut off MCAS during an identical emergency and landed
routinely.
At least one reason that these type of accidents occur may have to do
with how pilots' manual flying skills atrophy as cockpits become more automated,
according to a 2014 study by NASA research psychologist Stephen
Casner.
While basic tasks like monitoring instruments and manually
controlling a plane tend to stay intact in the automated modern cockpit, the
study found "more frequent and significant problems" with navigation and
recognizing instrument system failures.
A different study by Casner and others in 2013 found a similar issue:
flying has gotten so safe that pilots don't experience emergencies much during
regular operations, if at all. That is good news in the main, but it means that
crews also aren't as prepared.
The study suggested that airlines devise more realistic and complex
training scenarios, and that they give pilots more practice reacting to
emergencies that occur while automation is off.
"Where novices are derailed, discombobulated or taken by surprise
when problems are presented under novel circumstances, experts
characteristically perform as if they have 'been there and done that,' " the
authors said.
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