(Press-News.org) Female pilots may outperform their male counterparts in high-pressure flight situations, according to a new study led by University of Waterloo researchers.
The findings challenge traditional assumptions in aviation and suggest that women pilots may have unique strengths that could be better recognized in pilot training and evaluation systems.
“These findings are exciting because they push us to rethink how we evaluate pilots,” said Naila Ayala, lead author of the study and postdoctoral fellow in Waterloo’s Multisensory Brain and Cognition Lab.
“We can’t assume that because two pilots are looking at the same things, they will react the same way. Our study shows that women may be better at keeping control and making decisions in stressful flight scenarios.”
The research also found that despite male and female pilots having nearly identical visual attention patterns and flight experience, female pilots tend to make fewer flight control errors when stress levels increase.
This means that while both genders paid attention to the same information during a flight, women were more consistent and accurate in how they responded to it. The results highlight the importance of looking beyond surface-level indicators like visual focus when measuring pilot performance.
The researchers used a high-fidelity flight simulator to study 20 experienced general aviation pilots—10 women and 10 men—as they flew through a series of typical and emergency situations. During each scenario, the team recorded where the pilots were looking and how they responded.
The pilots all wore eye-tracking glasses and completed standardized flight tasks that included unexpected engine failures and landing challenges, designed to test their reactions under pressure. This allowed researchers to gather data on both visual attention and performance accuracy.
“Understanding how different people perform under pressure helps us build better training programs for everyone, safer cockpits, and more inclusive aviation systems,” said Suzanne Kearns, associate professor and director of the Waterloo Institute for Sustainable Aeronautics.
“At a time when the industry is facing a pilot shortage, tapping into the full potential of all pilots, regardless of gender, is more important than ever.”
The team hopes the findings will help shape future pilot training and evaluation standards by recognizing a wider range of strengths and abilities.
The study, “Exploring gender differences in aviation: Integrating high-fidelity simulator performance and eye-tracking approaches in low-time pilots,” is published in the Proceedings of the 2025 Symposium on Eye Tracking Research and Applications (ETRA '25).
END
Female pilots perform better under pressure, study finds
New research challenges gender bias in aviation performance using eye-tracking technology and flight simulation
2025-07-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Hydroquinone-buffered covalent organic frameworks for long-term photocatalytic hydrogen peroxide production
2025-07-30
Hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂) is an essential eco-friendly oxidant, but its conventional anthraquinone-based production is energy-intensive and generates hazardous waste. Photocatalysis offers a sustainable, solar-driven alternative. Organic polymer photocatalysts, notably covalent organic frameworks (COFs), have gained attention due to their tunable structures, earth-abundant elements, and visible-light responsiveness. Although recent advances (e.g., polarity-optimized, fluorinated, or sulfone-containing COFs) have improved H₂O₂ yields and extended stability to 336 hours, long-term durability remains limited. Most systems exhibit reaction times of less than 200 hours ...
From coal to chemicals: Breakthrough syngas catalysis powers green industrial future
2025-07-30
Two decades-long catalytic journey has borne industrial fruit—greener, cleaner, and smarter. Fischer–Tropsch synthesis (FTS) and heterogeneous hydroformylation are two cornerstone processes in modern chemical manufacturing. They convert syngas (a mixture of CO and H₂, typically derived from coal or biomass) into hydrocarbons and oxygenates that underpin fuel, plastics, and pharmaceutical industries. Yet for over a century, challenges in selectivity, catalyst longevity, and process integration have limited their broader industrial deployment—until now.
In a newly published account in Chinese Journal of ...
AI detects the stiffness of cancer cell exosomes: DGIST develops deep learning-based lung cancer diagnostic technology
2025-07-30
□ The research team led by Senior Researchers Yoonhee Lee from the Division of Biomedical Technology and Gyogwon Koo from the Division of Intelligent Robot at DGIST (under President Kunwoo Lee) has developed a technology that distinguishes lung cancer gene mutations solely by measuring the “stiffness” of exosomes—tiny particles released from cancer cells in the bloodstream—using atomic force microscopy (AFM). Their study enables rapid and precise analysis of individual exosomes and is expected to advance into a new liquid biopsy-based diagnostic technique for lung cancer.
□ Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is the most common type ...
Positive ethnic identity fosters STEM career aspirations
2025-07-30
When Black and Latino youth aspire toward careers in science and technology, their confidence in exploring career possibilities and how they think society views their ethnic-racial group can play a crucial role in whether their dreams take root.
Such is a finding of a study by UC Riverside associate professor of psychology Aerika Brittian Loyd, UCR doctoral candidate Tate LeBlanc, and co-authors published in the Journal for STEM Education Research.
Middle and high school students who voiced higher expectations of success in exploring different career paths — along with perceptions that their racial ...
Wildlife show wide range of responses to human presence in U.S. national parks
2025-07-30
The presence of humans and human infrastructure in U.S. national parks has lasting effects on the behaviours of the large animals that call them home, according to a new study.
“Wildlife all around the world fear people and avoid areas of high human activity, but it was surprising to see that this holds true even in more remote protected areas,” said Dr. Kaitlyn Gaynor, a zoologist at the University of British Columbia and lead author of the paper published today in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Researchers tracked 229 animals from 10 species across 14 national parks and protected areas using GPS collar data from 2019 to 2020, ...
Great Tits show early signs of splitting up: Oxford researchers uncover social clues to bird 'divorce'
2025-07-30
In a discovery that deepens our understanding of animal social bonds, a study led by University of Oxford researchers in collaboration with the University of Leeds has demonstrated that wild great tits exhibit clear behaviours signalling ‘divorce’ long before the breeding season. The findings, published today (30 July) in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, provide valuable new insights into how animals navigate complex social decisions. provide valuable new insights into how animals navigate complex social decisions.
For monogamous birds that only bond with one partner at a time, ...
From the lab to the hand: nanodevice brings personalized genomics closer to reality
2025-07-30
Osaka, Japan – DNA holds the instructions that make us who we are. If we want to read those instructions, say to understand our predisposition to genetic disorders, we need to carefully ‘unzip’ DNA’s iconic double-helix structure. This is neither easy nor fast, and the process involves intense heating and chemicals that can damage the DNA.
Now, in a new study published in ACS Nano, a research team led by The University of Osaka has developed a novel technology for making the unzipping process much easier. Their invention uses a miniature heater to precisely and gently unzip the DNA double helix.
The device uses a nano-sized platinum coil. As the DNA strand reaches ...
Women politicians receive more identity-based attacks on social media than men, study finds
2025-07-30
Women politicians in Europe receive uncivil tweets regardless of how known they are – and woman also receive more identity-based attacks than other politicians, revealed a new study in Politics & Gender, published on behalf of the American Political Science Association by Cambridge University Press.
This study used a machine learning approach to analyse over 23 million tweets addressed to politicians in Germany, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States, to determine the degree of incivility that female politicians face. Women in politics frequently report serious online harassment, yet the extent of this harassment and how it compares ...
Idaho National Laboratory accelerates nuclear energy projects with Amazon Web Services cloud and AI technologies
2025-07-29
(IDAHO FALLS, Idaho) — The Idaho National Laboratory (INL) and Amazon Web Services (AWS) will collaborate to use AWS’s advanced capabilities and cloud infrastructure to develop artificial intelligence (AI) tools for nuclear energy projects.
INL leads the nation in adapting AI for the nuclear energy industry. The laboratory is developing a suite of technologies that use AI to reduce the costs and timeframes of designing, licensing, building and operating nuclear facilities. Ultimately, the tools could be used for safe and reliable autonomous operation of nuclear reactors and accelerating deployment of new advanced reactors.
AWS’s advanced computing power and AI foundation ...
Kavraki elected to European Academy of Sciences
2025-07-29
Lydia Kavraki, a pioneering researcher in robotics, computational biomedicine and artificial intelligence (AI) at Rice University, has been elected to the European Academy of Sciences. This prestigious organization recognizes excellence in scientific advancement and innovation.
The honor will be conferred in Geneva in December, placing Kavraki among an elite group of scientists whose work drives progress in both academia and applied technology. Kavraki, the Kenneth and Audrey Kennedy Professor of Computing, holds multiple appointments across engineering ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Liver fibrosis to cancer: scientists map path to block deadly transition
Microbiota boost immunotherapy? A meta-analysis dives into fecal microbiota transplantation and immune checkpoint inhibitors
Cancer's double agents: Fibroblasts both help and hinder immunotherapy
Unveiling large multimodal models in pulmonary CT: A comparative assessment of generative AI performance in lung cancer diagnostics
AI can fake peer reviews and escape detection, study finds
T cell senescence in the tumor microenvironment
Simple solution to save lives globally: Low-cost ‘SimpleSilo’ offers hope for babies with gastroschisis
Curbing roadway fatalities hinges on shared responsibility and rethinking safety
Beta-HPV can directly cause skin cancer in immunocompromised people
Efforts underway to end race-based assessments of lung function
CAR-T cell therapy linked to increased risk of secondary primary malignancies globally
THER: integrative web tool for tumor hypoxia exploration and research
How sources of dietary fat influence cancer growth in obesity
Women less likely than men to receive MS drugs
AI language models sharpen chest CT diagnoses, speeding surgical decisions
Machine learning model predicts which patients with nasopharyngeal cancer respond to radiation
GenAI models extract pathological features for lung adenocarcinoma grading and prognosis
New research further investigates safety of general anesthesia in infants
We might inhale 68,000 lung-penetrating microplastics daily in our homes and cars – 100x previous estimates
Indian adults who move to cities are significantly more likely to become obese than their rural counterparts - and the longer they stay, the greater the risk
Instagram images could influence public opinion on certain major events
Different dimensions of psychopathy might be associated with different physiological underpinnings of facial emotion recognition - and oxytocin could affect this skill - per scoping review of 66 studi
How cumulative heat exposure affects students
An international survey of over 300 adults reveals that males born in summer are potentially more prone to depression than those born in other seasons
The unusual head of a fish and the puzzle of its genes
How does metformin lower blood sugar?
Increasing solar power could lead to significant cuts in CO2 emissions
Black Death offers window into how childhood malnutrition affects adult health
Clinical trial finds safe, effective treatment for children with severe post-Covid syndrome
Researchers map where solar energy delivers the biggest climate payoff
[Press-News.org] Female pilots perform better under pressure, study findsNew research challenges gender bias in aviation performance using eye-tracking technology and flight simulation