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⚖ Operations · PHAK Chapter 2, Human Factors; FAA-G-8082-22Q-241 · 241 of 251

A remote pilot with two years of incident-free flying skips the written preflight checklist on a familiar site, reasoning that they know the aircraft and the location well. This behavior is an example of which hazardous attitude?

Why →
Complacency develops when repetition without incident leads a pilot to underestimate risk. A clean record on familiar sites feels like evidence that the checklist is unnecessary, when it is evidence that prior flights went well, not that future flights are safe. The FAA identifies complacency as a significant human factors threat because it erodes the habits that prevent accidents. The antidote is to treat every flight as if it were the first time.
The trap →
Choice A describes a different hazardous attitude. Impulsivity is acting without thinking in response to a perceived problem. Skipping a checklist on a familiar site is deliberate, not impulsive. Choice B describes macho, which involves proving capability or superiority. The pilot here is motivated by familiarity, not ego.
SOURCE → PHAK Chapter 2, Human Factors; FAA-G-8082-22CHECKED APR 22ACS V.C.K1MED
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