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Featured researches published by Andrew J. Dixon.


Journal of Aircraft | 2006

Aircraft Accident Statistics and Knowledge Database: Analyzing Passenger Behavior in Aviation Accidents

Edwin R. Galea; Kate M. Finney; Andrew J. Dixon; Asim Siddiqui; D. Cooney

The Aircraft Accident Statistics and Knowledge (AASK) database is a repository of passenger accounts from survivable aviation accidents/incidents compiled from interview data collected by agencies such as the US NTSB. Its main purpose is to store observational and anecdotal data from the actual interviews of the occupants involved in aircraft accidents. The database has wide application to aviation safety analysis, being a source of factual data regarding the evacuation process. It also plays a significant role in the development of the airEXODUS aircraft evacuation model, where insight into how people actually behave during evacuation from survivable aircraft crashes is required. This paper describes the latest version of the database (Version 4.0) and includes some analysis of passenger behavior during actual accidents/incidents.


Archive | 2007

The 2001 World Trade Centre evacuation

Edwin R. Galea; P. Lawrence; S.J. Blake; Andrew J. Dixon; H. Westeng

The WTC evacuation of 11 September 2001 provides an unrepeatable opportunity to probe into and understand the very nature of evacuation dynamics and with this improved understanding, contribute to the design of safer, more evacuation efficient, yet highly functional, high rise buildings. Following 9/11 the Fire Safety Engineering Group (FSEG) of the University of Greenwich embarked on a study of survivor experiences from the WTC Twin Towers evacuation. The experiences were collected from published accounts appearing in the print and electronic mass media and are stored in a relational data base specifically developed for this purpose. Using these accounts and other available sources of information FSEG also undertook a series of numerical simulations of the WTC North Tower. This paper represents an overview of the results from both studies.


Fire Safety Science | 2003

The AASK Database V3.0: A Database Of Human Experience During Aircraft Evacuation Incidents

Edwin R. Galea; Kate M. Finney; Andrew J. Dixon; D. Cooney; Asim Siddiqui

This paper describes recent developments with the Aircraft Accident Statistics and Knowledge (AASK) database. The AASK database is a repository of survivor accounts from aviation accidents developed by the Fire Safety Engineering Group of the University of Greenwich with support from the UK CAA. Its main purpose is to store observational and anecdotal data from the actual interviews of the occupants involved in aircraft accidents. Access to the latest version of the database (AASK V3.0) is available over the Internet. AASK consists of information derived from both passenger and cabin crew interviews, information concerning fatalities and basic accident details. Also provided with AASK is the Seat Plan Viewer that graphically displays the starting locations of all the passengers - both survivors and fatalities - as well as the exits used by the survivors. Data entered into the AASK database is extracted from the transcripts supplied by the National Transportation Safety Board in the US and the Air Accident Investigation Branch in the UK. The quality and quantity of the data was very variable ranging from short summary reports of the accidents to boxes of individual accounts from passengers, crew and investigators. Data imported into AASK V3.0 includes information from 55 accidents and individual accounts from 1295 passengers and 110 crew.


Aeronautical Journal | 2003

An analysis of human behaviour during aircraft evacuation situations using the AASK v3.0 database

Edwin R. Galea; Kate M. Finney; Andrew J. Dixon; Asim Siddiqui; D. Cooney


Archive | 2007

INVESTIGATING THE IMPACT OF OCCUPANT RESPONSE TIME ON COMPUTER SIMULATIONS OF THE WTC NORTH TOWER EVACUATION

Edwin R. Galea; Gary Sharp; Peter J. Lawrence; Andrew J. Dixon


Archive | 2004

The AASK database V4.0: aircraft accident statistics and knowledge. A database to record human experience of evacuation in aviation accidents

Edwin R. Galea; Kate M. Finney; Andrew J. Dixon; Asim Siddiqui; D. Cooney


Archive | 2003

The AASK database: Aircraft Accident Statistics and Knowledge

Edwin R. Galea; D. Cooney; Andrew J. Dixon; Kate M. Finney; Asim Siddiqui


Archive | 2004

An analysis of human behaviour during the WTC disaster of 9/11 based on published survivor accounts

S.J. Blake; Edwin R. Galea; H. Westang; Andrew J. Dixon


Human factors and aerospace safety | 2005

An Analysis of the Passenger to Cabin Crew Ratio and Exit Reliability Based on Past Survivable Aviation Accidents

Edwin R. Galea; Kate M. Finney; Andrew J. Dixon; Asim Siddiqui; D. Cooney


Archive | 2008

CAA paper 2006/01: a database to record human experience of evacuation in aviation accidents: the aircraft accident statistics and knowledge database (AASK)

Edwin R. Galea; Kate M. Finney; Andrew J. Dixon; Asim Siddiqui; D. Cooney

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D. Cooney

University of Greenwich

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S.J. Blake

University of Greenwich

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Gary Sharp

University of Greenwich

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H. Westeng

University of Greenwich

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P. Lawrence

University of Greenwich

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