Impact of Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAPs) on air safety: Evidence from Airbus® TCAS/ROSE simulators
Abstract
. The present research was designed to provide evidence into why and when Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAPs)
occur and pose a threat to aviation safety. Specifically, the goal was to understand how causal illusions interact
with perceptual biases with and without irrational reasoning. A total of 408 airline pilots participated in an
experiment using Airbus® aircraft TCAS/ROSE simulators. Analyses were conducted using structural equation
modeling (SEM), controlling for the effects of fatigue and flight hours. Results indicated that causal illusions were
82.4% predictive of UAP sightings only when magical inference was present. Our experimental evidence shows
that UAPs may be explained as cognitive biases and would pose a threat to aviation safety if pilots—or even
aircraft AIs—were to detect them in an irrational way (e.g., as alien objects). A novel theorization that integrates
major perception, clinical, and cognition models is offered. Additionally, the authors discuss the implications for
aviation safety and determine when a UAP sighting may pose a real danger on a commercial flight.
Impact of Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAPs) on air safety: Evidence from Airbus® TCAS/ROSE simulators
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
0969-6997Palabras Clave
.Causal illusions Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Cognitive bias Aviation safety Airbus® simulators