Article published In:
Australian Review of Applied Linguistics
Vol. 32:3 (2009) ► pp.24.124.16
References
Alderson, J. Charles; Horák, Tania
(2009) Report on a Survey of National Civil Aviation Authorities’ Plans for Implementation of ICAO Language Proficiency Requirements. Report prepared for the ICAO. Lancaster University.Google Scholar
CASA
(2009) Airspace Review of Bathurst Aerodrome. Unpublished report, March 2009 Canberra: Civil Aviation Safety Authority. Available from: [URL].
Cushing, Steven
(1994) Fatal Words: Communication Clashes and Aircraft Crashes. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Drury, Colin G.; Ma, Jiao
(2002) Language Error Analysis – Report on Literature of Aviation Language Errors and Analysis of Error Databases. Report prepared for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). University of Buffalo, State University of New York.Google Scholar
Emery, Henry; Roberts, Andy
(2008) Aviation English for ICAO Compliance, Oxford: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Farris, Candace; Trofimovich, Pavel; Segalowitz, Norman; Gatbonton, Elizabeth
(2008) Air traffic communication in a second language: Implications of cognitive factors for training and assessment. TESOL Quarterly, 42(3), 397–410. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gat, Isabelle B; Keith, Robert W
(1978) An effect of linguistic experience. Auditory word discrimination by native and non-native speakers of English. Audiology, 14(4), 339–345. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Goguen Joseph A.; Linde, Charlotte
(1983) Linguistic Methodology for the Analysis of Aviation Accidents. NASA Contract Report 3741. Washington, DC: National Aeronautics and Space Administration.Google Scholar
Helmreich, Robert L
(1994) Anatomy of a system accident: The crash of Avianca Flight 052. International Journal of Aviation Psychology, 4(3), 265–284. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Hutchins, Edwin; Klausen, Tove
1996Distributed cognition in an airline cockpit. In Engström, Y. and Middleton, D (Eds.), Cognition and Communication at Work (pp. 15–34). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Linde, Charlotte
(1988) Politeness and accidents in aviation discourse: The quantitative study of, communicative success. Language in Society, 17(3), 375–399. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Mayo, Lynn Hansberry; Florentine, Mary; Buus, S
(1997) Age of second-language acquisition and perception of speech in noise. Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research, 40(3), 686–693. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
MacBurnie, Eric
(2004) Aviation language proficiency. ICAO Journal, 59(1), 4–27.Google Scholar
McMillan, David
(1998) “…Say again?…” Miscommunications in air traffic control. Unpublished master’s thesis, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.Google Scholar
Mell, Jeremy
n.d.). “Emergency Calls - Messages out of the blue”. Toulouse: Ecole Nationale de I’Aviation Civile. Available from [URL].
Nevile, Maurice
(2001) Understanding who’s who in the airline cockpit: Pilots’ pronominal choices and cockpit roles. In McHoul, A.; Rapley, M. (Eds.), How to Analyse Talk in Institutional Settings: A Casebook of Methods. London: Continuum.Google Scholar
(2005) “Checklist complete” Or is it? Closing a task in the airline cockpit. Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 28(2), 60–76. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2006) Communication in Context: A Conversational Analysis Tool for Examining Recorded Voice Data in Investigations of Aviation Occurrences. Report prepared for the Australian Transport Safety Bureau. ATSB Research and Analysis Report B2005/0118.Google Scholar
(2007) Action in time: Ensuring timeliness for collaborative work in the airline cockpit. Language in Society, 36(2), 233–257. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(2008) Being out of order: Overlapping talk as evidence of trouble in airline pilots’ work. In Bhatia, Vijay K.; Flowerdew, John; Jones, Rodney H. (Eds.), Advances in Discourse Studies. Abingdon, UK: Routledge.Google Scholar
Nevile Maurice; Walker, Michael
(2005) A Context for Error: Using Conversational Analysis to Represent and Analyse Recorded Voice Data. Report prepared for the Australian Transport Safety Bureau. ATSB Aviation Research Report B2005/0108.Google Scholar
Oliveira, Kelly
(2007, February). Command of English would have prevented Brazil’s worst air tragedy ever. Brazzil Magazine. Available from [URL].
Prinzo, O. Veronika
(2008) The computation and effects of air traffic control message complexity and message length on pilot readback performance. In Spink, A.J.; Ballintign, M.R; Bogers, N.D., Grieco, F.; Loijens, L.W.S.; Noldus, L.P.J.J; Smit, G., and Zimmerman, P.H. (Eds.), Proceedings of Measuring Behavior 2008 (Maastricht, The Netherlands, August 26-29, 2008).Google Scholar
Shimizu, Takashi; Makishima, Kazumi; Yoshida, Masafumi; Yamagishi, Hidetoshi
(2002) Effect of background noise on perception of English speech for Japanese listeners. Auris Nasus Larynx, 291, 121–125. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Sullivan, Patricia; Girginer, Handan
(2002) The use of discourse analysis to enhance ESP teacher knowledge: An example using aviation English. English for Specific Purposes 21(4), 397–404. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Cited by

Cited by 14 other publications

Cooke, Martin, Simon King, Maëva Garnier & Vincent Aubanel
2014. The listening talker: A review of human and algorithmic context-induced modifications of speech. Computer Speech & Language 28:2  pp. 543 ff. DOI logo
Dissanayaka, Y Hetti Pathiranalage Sulakshika Ashari Yapa, Brett R. C. Molesworth & Dominique Estival
2023. Miscommunication in Commercial Aviation: The Role of Accent, Speech Rate, Information Density, and Politeness Markers. The International Journal of Aerospace Psychology 33:1  pp. 79 ff. DOI logo
Jakonen, Antti, Minna Mänty & Hilla Nordquist
2022. Structured communication during emergency response driving: Safety-critical points identified by Finnish emergency response driving experts. Australasian Emergency Care 25:4  pp. 308 ff. DOI logo
Jang, Raymond, Brett R.C. Molesworth, Marion Burgess & Dominique Estival
2014. Improving communication in general aviation through the use of noise cancelling headphones. Safety Science 62  pp. 499 ff. DOI logo
Karanikas, Nektarios, Dimitrios Chionis & Anastasios Plioutsias
2020. “Old” and “new” safety thinking: Perspectives of aviation safety investigators. Safety Science 125  pp. 104632 ff. DOI logo
Moder, Carol Lynn
2012. Aviation English. In The Handbook of English for Specific Purposes,  pp. 227 ff. DOI logo
Moder, Carol Lynn
2012. Aviation English. In The Encyclopedia of Applied Linguistics, DOI logo
Molesworth, Brett R.C., Marion Burgess & Daniel Kwon
2013. The use of noise cancelling headphones to improve concurrent task performance in a noisy environment. Applied Acoustics 74:1  pp. 110 ff. DOI logo
Molesworth, Brett R.C. & Dominique Estival
2015. Miscommunication in general aviation: The influence of external factors on communication errors. Safety Science 73  pp. 73 ff. DOI logo
Sekkate, Sara, Mohammed Khalil & Abdellah Adib
2016. 2016 International Conference on Wireless Networks and Mobile Communications (WINCOM),  pp. 47 ff. DOI logo
Sekkate, Sara, Mohammed Khalil & Abdellah Adib
2016. 2016 11th International Conference on Intelligent Systems: Theories and Applications (SITA),  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Trippe, Julia & Melissa Baese-Berk
2019. A prosodic profile of American Aviation English. English for Specific Purposes 53  pp. 30 ff. DOI logo
Yin, Yan, Guoxing Yu & Dayong Huang
2023. Implementing the ICAO Language Proficiency Requirements: The Localization of Aviation English Testing. Applied Linguistics DOI logo
Zhao, Wen
2023. A corpus-based study on aviation English from the perspective of systemic functional linguistics. Discourse & Communication 17:5  pp. 630 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 28 march 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.