Captain
Richard
Fariello,
TWA,
Ret.,
B.S.,
ATP
Captain
David
Keeling,
SWA
Barbara
Burian,
Ph.D.
Barbara
Burian,
the EAS
Project
Director,
is a Senior
Research
Associate
and works
through
the San
Jose State
University
at the
NASA Ames
Research
Center.
Barbara
is involved
in research
related
to the
design
and development
of emergency
and abnormal
checklists
and procedures,
particularly
those
related
to potentially
catastrophic
emergencies
such as
in-flight
fire,
smoke
and, fumes
events.
She also
conducts
research
related
to the
use of
automated
procedures
and intelligent
agents
on the
flight
deck and
pilot
weather
training,
knowledge
and decision
making.
Barbara
is a private
pilot
and has
a bachelor’s
degree
in Education
from The
Ohio State
University
and master’s
and doctoral
degrees
in Psychology
from Southern
Illinois
University
in Carbondale.
She completed
a pre-doctoral
internship
and post-doctoral
residency
at the
University
of Florida
and the
University
of Miami
Medical
Center,
respectively.
She was
awarded
Stanford/San
Jose State
University/NASA/ASEE
Faculty
Fellowships
in 1999
and 2000.
She left
academia
and 10
years
of clinical
practice,
with a
specialty
in Post
Traumatic
Stress
Disorder,
to work
at the
NASA Ames
Research
Center
full-time
in August
2000.
Key
Dismukes,
Ph.D.
Key
Dismukes
is
Chief
Scientist
for
Human
Factors
in
the
Human
Factors
Research
&
Technology
Division
at
NASA
Ames
Research
Center.
His
current
research
addresses
cognitive
issues
involved
in
the
skilled
performance
of
pilots,
their
ability
to
manage
challenging
situations,
and
their
vulnerability
to
error.
Among
the
topics
investigated
by
his
research
group
are
prospective
memory
(remembering
to
perform
deferred
intentions),
management
of
attention
in
concurrent
task
performance,
and
training
crews
to
analyze
their
own
performance.
Previously,
Dr.
Dismukes
was
Director
of
Life
Sciences
at
the
Air
Force
Office
of
Scientific
Research.
He
received
his
PhD
in
biophysics
from
Pennsylvania
State
University
and
received
postdoctoral
training
at
the
Johns
Hopkins
University
School
of
Medicine.
He
has
published
papers
in
basic
and
applied
psychology,
neuroscience,
and
science
and
social
policy.
He
holds
airline
transport
pilot,
B737
and
Citation
type,
and
glider
instructor
ratings.
The
primary
reason
he
holds
a
paying
job
is
to
support
his
addiction
to
flying
sailplanes.
Benjamin
A.
Berman
Ben
Berman
is
working
with
the
research
team
on
an
evaluation
of
cognitive
factors
during
air
carrier
accidents.
He
began
this
work
at
NASA
Ames
in
late
2001.
Ben
is
a
pilot
for
a
major
U.S.
air
carrier.
Before
returning
to
the
skies
he
served
as
the
Chief
of
the
Major
Investigations
Division
of
the
National
Transportation
Safety
Board.
Earlier
he
was
Chief
of
the
Operational
Factors
Division
(managing
flight
crew,
air
traffic
control,
and
weather
issues
in
accidents),
an
accident
investigator,
and
a
flight
crew
human
factors
researcher
at
the
NTSB.
Ben
holds
an
Airline
Transport
Pilot
certificate
with
type
ratings
in
the
Boeing
737,
Embraer
120,
and
Dornier
228.
He
received
the
A.
B.
degree
summa
cum
laude
in
Economics
from
Harvard
College
in
1979.
He
and
his
wife,
daughter,
and
puppy
live
in
the
Maryland
suburbs
of
Washington,
D.C.