04059oam 2200793M 450 991095634950332120251117083901.01-315-55702-91-317-02839-21-317-02838-41-280-67765-197866136545880-7546-9934-X10.4324/9781315557021(CKB)2670000000203797(EBL)932413(OCoLC)795120311(SSID)ssj0000677895(PQKBManifestationID)12246856(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000677895(PQKBWorkID)10694279(PQKB)10028998(MiAaPQ)EBC932413(Au-PeEL)EBL932413(CaPaEBR)ebr10568775(CaONFJC)MIL365458(OCoLC)1012165940(OCoLC)771913446(FINmELB)ELB139497(OCoLC-P)1012165940(FlBoTFG)9781315557021(EXLCZ)99267000000020379720171103d2017 my 0engur|||||||||||txtccrThe human factors of fratricide /Laura Rafferty, Neville A. Stanton, Guy H. WalkerFirst edition.Burlington, Vt. Ashgate Pub.2012[Place of publication not identified] :CRC Press,2017.1 online resource (256 p.)Human factors in defenceDescription based upon print version of record.1-138-07583-3 0-7546-7974-8 Includes bibliographical references and index.Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Fratricide, expectations, situation awareness and teamwork -- Application of the F3 model to fratricide -- Feast : fratricide event analysis of systemic teamwork -- It's good to talk : exploration into the communications surrounding shoot, no-shoot decisions -- The communication masking effect : why it's not always good to talk -- Is it better to be connected? -- Comparison of populated models -- Conclusion -- References and bibliography -- Index."Fratricide has been defined as firing on your own forces, when mistaking them for enemy forces, which results in injury or death. Rates of fratricide incidence have been steadily increasing and the complexity of the contemporary operating environment may lead to a continuation of this trend. Although the majority of research into fratricide has focused on the development of technological decision aids, recent explorations highlight the need to emphasise the social aspects within a socio-technical framework. This book presents and validates, via the use of case studies, a model of teamwork and decision-making factors that are associated with incidents of fratricide. In summary, it offers a review and evaluation of contemporary theoretical perspectives on teamwork and fratricide, as well as a range of accident analysis approaches. A novel theory of fratricide is then presented followed by a new methodology for assessing fratricide. Naturalistic case studies of teams are undertaken in the military domain. These studies illustrate the approach and offer early validation evidence. In closing, the book presents a series of principles designed to reduce the likelihood of fratricide in the future."--Provided by publisher.Human factors in defence.FratricideTeams in the workplaceDecision makingCommunications, MilitaryFratricide.Teams in the workplace.Decision making.Communications, Military.355.4Rafferty Laura1476751Stanton Neville A(Neville Anthony),1960-Walker GuyOCoLC-POCoLC-PBOOK9910956349503321The human factors of fratricide4490583UNINA02242nam 2200409Ka 450 99669190650331620251120100028.29781478094425(CKB)40426775400041(ODN)ODN0012202432(EXLCZ)994042677540004120250825d2025 uy 0engurcn|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe archive and the aural city Sound, knowledge, and the politics of listening. /Alejandro L Madrid20251 online resourceSign, Storage, Transmission.9781478028864 In The Archive and the Aural City , Alejandro L. Madrid examines the possibilities for retrieving from the archive sounds that were not meant to be heard. Drawing on Ángel Rama's notion of the Lettered City, Madrid proposes a notion of the Aural City—a Latin American urban intellectual elite for whom sound and listening are central to the creation, re-creation, and circulation of new types of knowledge. While many of these elites carry forward a nationalistic agenda, Madrid contends that the Aural City's archives and the ways they are listened to and conceived through sound and music can also help dismantle dominant frameworks of national or colonial culture and build more inclusive spaces for intellectual exchange and political mobilization. From national archives in Latin America and colonial institutions abroad to sound exhibits, instruments, and internet-based archival projects, Madrid demonstrates how the development of urban spaces is understood through sound. In this way, he expands understandings of the archive's social and sonic power.NonfictionOverDriveMulti-CulturalOverDriveScienceOverDriveSociologyOverDriveNonfiction.Multi-Cultural.Science.Sociology.MUS015000SCI001000SOC008050bisacshMadrid Alejandro L1845872BOOK996691906503316The archive and the aural city4434462UNISA