|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Gareth LockPublisher: Human in the System Consulting Imprint: Human in the System Consulting Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.458kg ISBN: 9781999584979ISBN 10: 199958497 Pages: 342 Publication Date: 12 March 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews'This is currently the most important topic for modern sport diving'. Professor Simon Mitchell 'As we explorers descend deeper, farther and longer, the more the subject contained in this excellent book becomes relevant' Richard Lundgren, Explorer, Co-Founder of GUE, Fellow of the Explorers Club 'This essential volume has condensed the decades plus of hard work, dedication and commitment shown by Gareth. I have and will continue to apply what I learned from my training with Gareth in Human Factors to all my instructor and student level classes' Phil Short, Explore FRGS 'I think this is a missing link in our diver education systems and hope one day it will be taught in mainstream diving courses from entry level all the way to the extreme cutting edge end of our sports.' Steve Millard Utilizing case studies of actual diving incidents, alongside examinations compiled by other high-risk industries, Under Pressure seeks to remove the stigma surrounding the mistakes divers make, illuminate that errors are a critical part of our collective learning process, and that despite the level of one's experience, not a single one of us is infallible. Regardless of your current experience as a diver, the use of non-technical skills and understanding of the Human Factors affecting both your choices and those made by others around you will positively impact your own underwater performance, and hopefully make your own diving safer. Richie Kohler, Shipwreck Explorer, Author and Filmmaker. In my opinion, Gareth Lock's Under Pressure: Diving Deeper with Human Factors is a book that should be read by all divers, especially those taking or teaching technical diving. Non-technical skills or human factors are equally, if not more important, to diving safety. As long as we only look at the diver and not the system as a whole, we are unlikely to make diving safer. Lock presents this systematic approach to diving safety with chapters on a variety of subjects including such important topics as mindset, human error, risk management, just culture, situational awareness, and communication in a very concise, yet thorough approach with anecdotes by leading members of the diving community. I look forward to using all of these concepts as I teach future courses. Doug Ebersole, Cardiologist, rebreather instructor After more than thirty years of diving I have found very few books that will impact one's diving enjoyment and safety as this book. Under Pressure is a handbook for increasing diver safety through management of risk and uncertainty. It will give you a new way to examine and understand diving incidents so that we may actually learn from them instead of placing blame. This is a must have for every serious diver's library. Brando Schwartz Under Pressure is not a light read. Given the subject, it should not be. It's a work that requires the reader to change what may be their mindset about the risks and mitigation of such hazards as are encountered under water. As a recreational and technical instructor who has made diver safety and training a personal mission, Gareth's work is a breath of fresh air in an industry that seems hell-bent on taking the fast lane to mediocrity. Jim Lapenta Author of SCUBA: A Practical Guide for the New Diver, SCUBA: A Practical Guide to Advanced Level Training, The SDI Drysuit Course, and Staff Columnist for SCUBA & H2O magazine. 'This is currently the most important topic for modern sport diving'. Professor Simon Mitchell 'As we explorers descend deeper, farther and longer, the more the subject contained in this excellent book becomes relevant' Richard Lundgren, Explorer, Co-Founder of GUE, Fellow of the Explorers Club 'This essential volume has condensed the decades plus of hard work, dedication and commitment shown by Gareth. I have and will continue to apply what I learned from my training with Gareth in Human Factors to all my instructor and student level classes' Phil Short, Explore FRGS 'I think this is a missing link in our diver education systems and hope one day it will be taught in mainstream diving courses from entry level all the way to the extreme cutting edge end of our sports.' Steve Millard Utilizing case studies of actual diving incidents, alongside examinations compiled by other high-risk industries, Under Pressure seeks to remove the stigma surrounding the mistakes divers make, illuminate that errors are a critical part of our collective learning process, and that despite the level of one's experience, not a single one of us is infallible. Regardless of your current experience as a diver, the use of non-technical skills and understanding of the Human Factors affecting both your choices and those made by others around you will positively impact your own underwater performance, and hopefully make your own diving safer. Richie Kohler, Shipwreck Explorer, Author and Filmmaker. In my opinion, Gareth Lock's Under Pressure: Diving Deeper with Human Factors is a book that should be read by all divers, especially those taking or teaching technical diving. Non-technical skills or human factors are equally, if not more important, to diving safety. As long as we only look at the diver and not the system as a whole, we are unlikely to make diving safer. Lock presents this systematic approach to diving safety with chapters on a variety of subjects including such important topics as mindset, human error, risk management, just culture, situational awareness, and communication in a very concise, yet thorough approach with anecdotes by leading members of the diving community. I look forward to using all of these concepts as I teach future courses. Doug Ebersole, Cardiologist, rebreather instructor After more than thirty years of diving I have found very few books that will impact one's diving enjoyment and safety as this book. Under Pressure is a handbook for increasing diver safety through management of risk and uncertainty. It will give you a new way to examine and understand diving incidents so that we may actually learn from them instead of placing blame. This is a must have for every serious diver's library. Brando Schwartz Under Pressure is not a light read. Given the subject, it should not be. It's a work that requires the reader to change what may be their mindset about the risks and mitigation of such hazards as are encountered under water. As a recreational and technical instructor who has made diver safety and training a personal mission, Gareth's work is a breath of fresh air in an industry that seems hell-bent on taking the fast lane to mediocrity. Jim Lapenta Author of SCUBA: A Practical Guide for the New Diver, SCUBA: A Practical Guide to Advanced Level Training, The SDI Drysuit Course, and Staff Columnist for SCUBA & H2O magazine. 'This is currently the most important topic for modern sport diving'. Professor Simon Mitchell 'As we explorers descend deeper, farther and longer, the more the subject contained in this excellent book becomes relevant' Richard Lundgren, Explorer, Co-Founder of GUE, Fellow of the Explorers Club 'This essential volume has condensed the decades plus of hard work, dedication and commitment shown by Gareth. I have and will continue to apply what I learned from my training with Gareth in Human Factors to all my instructor and student level classes' Phil Short, Explore FRGS 'I think this is a missing link in our diver education systems and hope one day it will be taught in mainstream diving courses from entry level all the way to the extreme cutting edge end of our sports.' Steve Millard Utilizing case studies of actual diving incidents, alongside examinations compiled by other high-risk industries, Under Pressure seeks to remove the stigma surrounding the mistakes divers make, illuminate that errors are a critical part of our collective learning process, and that despite the level of one's experience, not a single one of us is infallible. Regardless of your current experience as a diver, the use of non-technical skills and understanding of the Human Factors affecting both your choices and those made by others around you will positively impact your own underwater performance, and hopefully make your own diving safer. Richie Kohler, Shipwreck Explorer, Author and Filmmaker. In my opinion, Gareth Lock's Under Pressure: Diving Deeper with Human Factors is a book that should be read by all divers, especially those taking or teaching technical diving. Non-technical skills or human factors are equally, if not more important, to diving safety. As long as we only look at the diver and not the system as a whole, we are unlikely to make diving safer. Lock presents this systematic approach to diving safety with chapters on a variety of subjects including such important topics as mindset, human error , risk management, just culture , situational awareness, and communication in a very concise, yet thorough approach with anecdotes by leading members of the diving community. I look forward to using all of these concepts as I teach future courses. Doug Ebersole, Cardiologist, rebreather instructor After more than thirty years of diving I have found very few books that will impact one's diving enjoyment and safety as this book. Under Pressure is a handbook for increasing diver safety through management of risk and uncertainty. It will give you a new way to examine and understand diving incidents so that we may actually learn from them instead of placing blame. This is a must have for every serious diver's library. Brando Schwartz Under Pressure is not a light read. Given the subject, it should not be. It's a work that requires the reader to change what may be their mindset about the risks and mitigation of such hazards as are encountered under water. As a recreational and technical instructor who has made diver safety and training a personal mission, Gareth's work is a breath of fresh air in an industry that seems hell-bent on taking the fast lane to mediocrity. Jim Lapenta Author of SCUBA: A Practical Guide for the New Diver, SCUBA: A Practical Guide to Advanced Level Training, The SDI Drysuit Course, and Staff Columnist for SCUBA & H2O magazine. 'This is currently the most important topic for modern sport diving'. Professor Simon Mitchell 'As we explorers descend deeper, farther and longer, the more the subject contained in this excellent book becomes relevant' Richard Lundgren, Explorer, Co-Founder of GUE, Fellow of the Explorers Club 'This essential volume has condensed the decades plus of hard work, dedication and commitment shown by Gareth. I have and will continue to apply what I learned from my training with Gareth in Human Factors to all my instructor and student level classes' Phil Short, Explore FRGS "'This is currently the most important topic for modern sport diving'. Professor Simon Mitchell 'As we explorers descend deeper, farther and longer, the more the subject contained in this excellent book becomes relevant' Richard Lundgren, Explorer, Co-Founder of GUE, Fellow of the Explorers Club 'This essential volume has condensed the decades plus of hard work, dedication and commitment shown by Gareth. I have and will continue to apply what I learned from my training with Gareth in Human Factors to all my instructor and student level classes' Phil Short, Explore FRGS 'I think this is a missing link in our diver education systems and hope one day it will be taught in mainstream diving courses from entry level all the way to the extreme cutting edge end of our sports.' Steve Millard Utilizing case studies of actual diving incidents, alongside examinations compiled by other high-risk industries, ""Under Pressure"" seeks to remove the stigma surrounding the mistakes divers make, illuminate that errors are a critical part of our collective learning process, and that despite the level of one's experience, not a single one of us is infallible. Regardless of your current experience as a diver, the use of non-technical skills and understanding of the Human Factors affecting both your choices and those made by others around you will positively impact your own underwater performance, and hopefully make your own diving safer. Richie Kohler, Shipwreck Explorer, Author and Filmmaker. In my opinion, Gareth Lock's ""Under Pressure: Diving Deeper with Human Factors"" is a book that should be read by all divers, especially those taking or teaching technical diving. ""Non-technical skills"" or ""human factors"" are equally, if not more important, to diving safety. As long as we only look at the diver and not the system as a whole, we are unlikely to make diving safer. Lock presents this systematic approach to diving safety with chapters on a variety of subjects including such important topics as mindset, ""human error"", risk management, ""just culture"", situational awareness, and communication in a very concise, yet thorough approach with anecdotes by leading members of the diving community. I look forward to using all of these concepts as I teach future courses. Doug Ebersole, Cardiologist, rebreather instructor After more than thirty years of diving I have found very few books that will impact one's diving enjoyment and safety as this book. ""Under Pressure"" is a handbook for increasing diver safety through management of risk and uncertainty. It will give you a new way to examine and understand diving incidents so that we may actually learn from them instead of placing blame. This is a must have for every serious diver's library. Brando Schwartz Under Pressure is not a light read. Given the subject, it should not be. It's a work that requires the reader to change what may be their mindset about the risks and mitigation of such hazards as are encountered under water. As a recreational and technical instructor who has made diver safety and training a personal mission, Gareth's work is a breath of fresh air in an industry that seems hell-bent on taking the fast lane to mediocrity. Jim Lapenta Author of SCUBA: A Practical Guide for the New Diver, SCUBA: A Practical Guide to Advanced Level Training, The SDI Drysuit Course, and Staff Columnist for SCUBA & H2O magazine." Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |