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Risk of Adverse Outcome Due to Inadequate Human Systems Integration Architecture

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Terry Virts in the Destiny U.S. Laboratory.
Flight engineer Terry Virts is photographed in the Destiny U.S. Laboratory.
NASA

The risk of inadequate human system integration architecture can impact all phases of mission operation where the crewmembers are expected to interact with the vehicle in both nominal and off-nominal operation. Most importantly, as the distance from Earth increases, crew will need to be more independent and be able to handle greater operational complexity. Without the current level of ground support, there is a possibility that crew will be unable to adequately respond to unanticipated critical malfunctions and/or perform safety critical procedures. 

NASA astronaut and Expedition 63 Commander Chris Cassidy poses
NASA astronaut and Expedition 63 Commander Chris Cassidy poses with two Astrobee robotic assistants during visual and navigation tests inside the Kibo laboratory module from JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency).

Directed Acyclic Graph Files

+ DAG File Information (HSRB Home Page)

+ HSIA Risk DAG and Narrative (PDF)

+ HSIA Risk DAG Code (TXT)

Human Research Program

+ Risk of Adverse Outcome Due to Inadequate Human Systems Integration Architecture

Multiple Evidence Reports are available for this Risk. Please see the relevant section on the Human Research Roadmap Evidence page for all of the Evidence Reports.

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Last Updated
Sep 27, 2023
Editor
Robert E. Lewis