
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode, Gareth Lock delves into the nature of human error, exploring concepts like slips, lapses, mistakes, and violations through the lens of safety research and diving experiences. Drawing on James Reason’s work, Gareth explains how understanding errors and violations—whether unintended or situational—can foster learning, reduce outcome bias, and improve safety systems. By openly discussing mistakes, instructors can lower authority gradients, increase psychological safety, and promote a Just Culture where errors are seen as opportunities for growth rather than blame. Tune in to learn how these principles apply to diving and beyond.
Original blog: https://www.thehumandiver.com/blog/mistakes-errors-words-have-meaning
Tags: English, Decision Making, Gareth Lock, Human Error, Psychological Safety
By Gareth Lock at The Human Diver5
1111 ratings
In this episode, Gareth Lock delves into the nature of human error, exploring concepts like slips, lapses, mistakes, and violations through the lens of safety research and diving experiences. Drawing on James Reason’s work, Gareth explains how understanding errors and violations—whether unintended or situational—can foster learning, reduce outcome bias, and improve safety systems. By openly discussing mistakes, instructors can lower authority gradients, increase psychological safety, and promote a Just Culture where errors are seen as opportunities for growth rather than blame. Tune in to learn how these principles apply to diving and beyond.
Original blog: https://www.thehumandiver.com/blog/mistakes-errors-words-have-meaning
Tags: English, Decision Making, Gareth Lock, Human Error, Psychological Safety

31,987 Listeners

30,716 Listeners

43,605 Listeners

11,034 Listeners

896 Listeners

56,516 Listeners

257 Listeners

69 Listeners

10 Listeners

40 Listeners

26,619 Listeners

51 Listeners

16,908 Listeners

13 Listeners

2,123 Listeners