Abstract
Thirty-seven train engineers, a stratified random sample of a population of 200 passenger train engineers, were studied by interviews and personality questionnaires. For one month they registered in detail their daily activities (work, sleep, meals, etc.). For the same month records were automatically registered for speeding, false alarms, and delayed reactions to yellow signals. The results show that the errors are much more related to personality aspects than to aspects of work organization.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
