Research scientist will provide recommendations to the FAA focused on the most significant human factor risks to aviation safety.
Dr. Bryan Reimer, a research scientist at the MIT Center for Transportation and Logistics (MIT CTL), and the Founder and Co-leader of the Advanced Vehicle Technology (AVT) Consortium and the Human Factors Evaluator for Automotive Demand (AHEAD) Consortium in the MIT AgeLab, has been appointed to the Task Force on Human Factors in Aviation Safety Aviation Rulemaking Committee (ARC) (“HF Task Force ARC”). The HF Task Force ARC will provide recommendations to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) on the most significant human factors and the relative contribution of these factors to aviation safety risk.
Reimer, who has worked at MIT since 2003, joins a committee whose operational or academic expertise includes air carrier operations, air traffic control, pilot experience, aeronautical information, aircraft maintenance and mechanics psychology, human-machine integration, and general aviation operations. Their recommendations to the FAA will help ensure safety for passengers, aircraft crews, and cargo for years to come. His appointment follows a year of serving on the Transforming Transportation Advisory Committee (TTAC) for the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT), where he has taken on the role of vice chair on the Artificial Intelligence (AI) sub-committee. The TTAC recently released a report to the Secretary of Transportation in response to its charter.
As a mobility and technology futurist working at the intersection of technology, human behavior, and public policy, Reimer brings his expertise in human-machine integration, transportation safety, and AI to the committee. The committee, chartered by congressional mandate through the bi-partisan FAA Reauthorization Act of 2024, specifically calls for a portion of the committee to have expertise on human factors but whose experience and training are not primarily in aviation, which Reimer will provide.
MIT CTL creates supply chain innovation and drives it into practice through the three pillars of research, outreach, and education, working with businesses, government, and nongovernmental organizations. As a longtime advocate of collaboration across public and private sectors to ensure consumers’ safety in transportation, Reimer’s particular expertise will help the FAA more broadly consider the human element of aviation safety. Dr. Yossi Sheffi, Director of MIT CTL, says, “Aviation plays a critical role in the rapid and reliable transportation of goods across vast distances, making it essential for delivering time-sensitive products globally. We must understand the current human factors involved in this process to help ensure smooth operation of this indispensable service amid potential disruptions.”
Reimer recently discussed his research on an episode of The Ojo-Yoshida Report with Phil Koopman, a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
HF Task Force ARC members will serve a two-year term. The first ARC plenary meeting will be held January 15-16, 2025, in Washington, D.C.