Captain Shem Malmquist, MSc, FRAeS, is an instructor and graduate lecturer at the Florida Institute ofTechnology teaching aviation safety, accident investigation and system safety. In addition, he is a B-777 Captain flying worldwide and has been involved in training program development as well as flight training. Captain Malmquist has published numerous technical and academic articles stemming from his work on flight safety and accident investigation. His current work involves risk analysis, accident prevention, flight operations work and development of standards for transport airplanes. He has led or been deeply involved in several major aircraft accident investigations, performing operations, human factors, systems, and aircraft performance analysis. He is an elected Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society, as well as full member of ISASI, the Resilience Engineering Association, AIAA, the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, IEEE, the Flight Safety Foundation and SAE where he is an active member of the Flight Deck and Handling Quality Standards for Transport Aircraft and several other committees involving aircraft certification standards. Dennis Vincenzi earned his Doctoral degree in 1998 from the University of Central Florida in Human Factors Psychology and has over 25 years of experience as a Human Factors scientist and researcher. Dr. Vincenzi held the position of Assistant Professor in the Department of Human Factors and Systems at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University from 1999 to 2004. Since leaving Embry-Riddle, he has worked for the United States Navy as a Senior Human Factors Scientist at the Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division (NAWCTSD) in Orlando, FL. Dr. Vincenzi has also been heavily involved in research involving pilot selection, human performance, and ground control station design for a number of Navy, Marine Corps, and Special Operations Command Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS). Dr. Vincenzi currently holds the position of Associate Professor in the Master of Science in Human Factors program in the College of Arts and Sciences at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. Shawn Pruchnicki Ph.D., FRAeS, ATP CFII MEI is an assistant professor at The Ohio State University (OSU), in the College of Engineering the owner of Human Factors Investigation and Education (HFIE). Originally trained as a pharmacist/toxicologist, he also worked as a firefighter/paramedic, an airline pilot, and later for NASA prior to arriving at OSU. During his time as an airline pilot, he performed ALPA safety work at both the local and national level (Director of HF) including time as an ALPA accident investigator where he received most of his training at the NTSB Training Academy. He has participated in five air carrier accidents and over 200 incidents in addition to other extensive domestic and international aviation safety work. His consulting company is very active globally with several employees working in various domains helping organizations solve a host of safety related issues including safety culture problems. He has testified to the US Senate on safety culture problems in aerospace manufacturing and the potential resulting dangers. Most of his research at OSU is related to resilience engineering and how it can be operationalized in safety sensitive domains when confronted with an accident investigation. This research involves how resilience engineering could be utilized to help understand causation and develop a more proactive approach to preventing accidents. Most of his research grants come from the FAA to investigate automation related problems in advanced flight deck designs. Shawn has an extensive safety concentrated research base and is published in NASA and FAA technical publications in addition to a broad range of scientific literature and scientific technical presentations . He is also highly sought after for media interviews and has almost 300 to date with about half international. Finally, in addition to being in several aviation films, plus functioning as a consultant in an aviation Hollywood film he is also a regular cast member on “Mayday - Air Disaster” TV series. Katherine A. Lemos, PhD, FRAeS, CFII is the principal of DaVinci Tech Performance LLC. As an expert in accident investigation, human decision-making, and safety management systems, Dr. Lemos is known for her innovative and strategic approaches leveraging advances in analytics and autonomy to prevent accidents and promote new technologies. Throughout her career, Dr. Lemos has focused on improving safety and efficiency at the level of the individual and the organization. She previously served as a senate-confirmed Chairperson and Board Member of the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board (CSB), and prior to this, in industry as a Director of Autonomous Systems for Northrop Grumman Corporation’s Aerospace Sector. Previous to this, she was a technical leader and program manager for research in aircraft certification and aviation safety at the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), at the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) as a Senior Human Performance Investigator in Aviation Safety, and as a project manager and statistician for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) at Langely Air Force Base through the University of Iowa, University of Maryland, and the National Institute of Aeronautics. She earned her PhD in Social Psychology from the University of Iowa, holds two masters in psychology, and a B.A. in business management.