
Originally Posted by
skip
Considering blueprint for survival, accident analysis, and the recent suggested additions to things that kill, i wonder if a risk analysis is possible in which the risk factors are assessed along the way. Like the difference between tables and computers is a square profile versus on the fly profiling, risk assessment may also be possible "on the fly."
Risk may come in packets of behavior. One packet is loading the gear, another is transporting, another is filling tanks, another is unloading gear (all rather boring). Then we get to the more interesting packets: setting up and checking the gear. I know we all make risk assessments at this stage/packet. A minor leak from the first stage - too small to be a worry so dive anyway? We do buddy checks, S-drills, run guidlelines, etc., and each behavioral packet has it's own associated risk.
We've often heard of the "cascade of events" that results in an incident. A packet analysis may be a way of deciding the relative contribution of each event in the cascade and of finding the tipping point. I know we already do something like what I'm trying to define: buddy checks at this point in time, S-drills, air-sharing, at other points in time. But perhaps it needs to be extended to the dive itself. The dive has a beginning, middle, end, naturally, but it also has a lower and upper middle(?) Moments or "packets" during which risk is present. At different times, different packets, are associated with different levels of risk.
Gas management is often based on losing all gas at max penetration (the most critical "packet" is max penetration), but gas loss is a risk, varying risk, at any point in the dive, and not just based on penetration/distance/time (lose deco gas half-way through deco for example). Gas management "rules" may be better designed with a packet analysis of risk. Reading the thread over on TDS on 1/2+200 vs 1/3's may be an argument over packet analysis versus overall dive planning.
Packet analysis may also influence other guidelines (no pun intended). It's pretty obvious that some divers run lines, while others assess the risk of silt out as too improbable to bother with a guideline today. Still others do visual jumps (one "packet" may occur at the jump decision point).
In some very general way, a "packet analysis" view means assessing risk at each significant point during the dive. It may be nothing more than that, but an attitude of dividing the dive up into significant packets in which the diver stops, breathes, thinks, assess risk, and then continues or calls it....well maybe some benefit?
If this sounds rather vague that's because it is! and BTW, I just made up packet analysis, or maybe read the term somewhere in computer programming, or just heard it used for something else once. It's not a "real" thing as far as I know.
-skip
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