Aviation systems do not always behave in predictable, proportional ways.
Small changes or failures can produce disproportionately large outcomes. This is known as non-linear system behaviour.
Understanding this is critical to understanding why aviation accidents cannot be explained through simple cause-and-effect reasoning.
What is Non-Linear Behaviour?
In linear systems:
- input and output are proportional
In non-linear systems:
- small inputs can create large effects
- large inputs may have minimal impact
- outcomes are not predictable from individual components
Why Aviation Systems Are Non-Linear
Aviation systems are:
- complex
- tightly coupled
- highly interactive
This means:
- components influence each other
- system behaviour depends on context
- interactions create unpredictable outcomes
Interaction Effects
👉 https://aviationrisklab.com/interaction-effects-in-aviation-systems/
Non-linearity emerges from interaction.
- independent issues combine
- effects amplify each other
- outcomes exceed individual contributions
Failure Propagation
👉 https://aviationrisklab.com/failure-propagation-system-coupling-aviation/
In tightly coupled systems:
- failures spread rapidly
- system behaviour escalates
- recovery becomes more difficult
Connection to Risk Accumulation
👉 https://aviationrisklab.com/risk-accumulation-in-aviation/
Non-linear systems amplify accumulated risk.
- small degradations combine
- tipping points are reached
- system behaviour changes rapidly
Connection to Safety Engineering
👉 https://aviationrisklab.com/safety-engineering/
Safety engineering must account for:
- unpredictable system behaviour
- interaction-driven outcomes
- non-proportional risk
This is why layered defences are required.
Case Study Context
👉 https://aviationrisklab.com/case-studies/
Non-linear behaviour is visible in:
- Air France Flight 447 → small input errors escalating into loss of control
- Colgan Air Flight 3407 → workload + fatigue + response amplification
Conclusion
Non-linear system behaviour explains why aviation accidents are rarely the result of a single cause.
They emerge from interactions within a complex system where small changes can lead to large consequences.
Understanding this is essential for analysing and managing aviation risk.
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