Assessing If Motivation Impacts General Aviation Pilots’ Persistence in Varying Weather Conditions

Continued flight under visual flight rules into instrument meteorological conditions is the predominant cause for fatal accidents by percentage, for general aviation aircraft operations. It is possible that a pilot’s motivation or reason for flying will override other safer, more logical courses of action when a hazard presents itself. The decision appears to stem from a willingness to persist in a course of action despite factors that indicate an alternate and safer course is warranted. This research addresses what is currently presumed about the decision to continue flying under visual flight rules into instrument conditions and marries those ideas with the extensive studies on how theoretically affects the decision-making process.

Project Details

Campus: Daytona Beach Campus
College: Daytona Beach College of Aviation
Department: Daytona Beach School of Graduate Studies
Type: Graduate
End Date: 01/22/2020

Research Team

Principal Investigators

Sabrina Woods
Sabrina Woods

Adjunct Faculty, College of Aviation

  • Department of Aeronautics
  • Worldwide College of Aviation

CO-Investigators

Scott Richard Winter
Scott Richard Winter

Associate Professor and Associate Dean

  • School of Graduate Studies (SGS)
  • Daytona College of Aviation