This paper describes the development and new application of a text modeling process for identifying human factors topics, such as fatigue, workload, and distraction in aviation safety reports. Current approaches to identifying human factors topic representations in text data rely on manual review from subject matter experts. The implementation of a semi-supervised text modeling method overcomes the need for lengthy manual review through an initial extraction of pre-defined human factors topics, freeing time for focus on analyzing the information. This modeling approach allows analysts to use keywords to define topics of interest up front and influence the convergence of the model toward a result that reflects them, which provides an advantage over classic topic modeling approaches where domain knowledge is not integrated into the generation of derived topics. This paper includes a description of the modeling approach and rationale, data used, evaluation methods, challenges, and suggestions for future applications.
CITATION STYLE
Lyall-Wilson, B., Kim, N., & Hohman, E. (2019). MODELING HUMAN FACTORS TOPICS IN AVIATION REPORTS. In Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society (Vol. 63, pp. 126–130). SAGE Publications Inc. https://doi.org/10.1177/1071181319631095
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