The Research of Domestic Passengers’ Perception to Cabin Safety / 國內搭機民眾對客艙安全認知之調查研究

碩士 / 國立成功大學 / 工業管理科學系碩博士班 / 90 / Abstract

Cabin safety reduces fatalities and injuries resulting from an accident and provides for a safe environment for passengers and crew members in and around an aircraft. This research through surveying domestic passengers’ perception of cabin safety, aviation safety risks, flight security and the conditions of safety briefing could be for future reference for establishing aviation safety information education on promotion, execution, and training. The findings of the analysis are as follows:
1. The respondents perceived that the safest rates for different ways of transportations were in the following order: trains, aircrafts, ships, buses, and cars. They perceived that aircrafts had the lowest accident survival rates. The respondents underestimate all kinds of aviation accidents survival rates. The lower the actual aviation accidents survival rate, the lower it was estimated.
2. About half the respondents considered that they had paid attention to emergency exit position and can operate oxygen masks and life vests, but couldn’t open emergency exit. About eighty percent of the respondents considered that the correct posture should be bending down and holding arms behind legs in a crash landing and listen to crewmember’s commands at evacuation. About half the respondents considered that external force strike was the most serious. The main three factors making evacuation difficult were: fire and smog, incapable of operating survival equipments, and crewmember’s poor crisis handling capacity.
3. 71 percent of the respondents expressed that they would listen to safety briefings and 34 percent of them would read safety briefing cards. The respondents expressed that the attendant-led briefing was the most attractive. The most effective way for propagandizing aviation safety was through television broadcasting.
4. The respondents expressed that the most effective precautionary measure of hijacking was strengthening the security check and agreed of disposing security guards for safety. The respondents considered that security guards should come from police squad. If hijacking occurred, 57.6 percent of the respondents expressed that they would take action to subdue the hijackers.
5. The correlation between hardware perception of cabin safety and frequency of listening to safety briefings, and reading safety briefing cards were both statistically significant

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TW/090NCKU5041021
Date January 2002
CreatorsFang Pin, 方斌
ContributorsTzai-Zang Lee, 李再長
Source SetsNational Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations in Taiwan
Languagezh-TW
Detected LanguageEnglish
Type學位論文 ; thesis
Format94

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