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Only Human – News, Analysis, and Insights from the World of Human Performance
Dr. Tony Kern
96 episodes
2 days ago
Over the last few years, we’ve pursued the goal of bridging the gap between who you are today and who you are capable of being by focusing on reducing human error and improving human performance from a mostly philosophical stance. Starting today, we’re centering practical application and real-world scenarios through the lens of the strategies and techniques we’ve been discussing. In this episode, Tony reviews an altercation between on-duty air traffic controllers at Ronald Reagan Airport, the experiences shared recently by the astronauts who were stranded on the International Space Station for
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Self-Improvement
Education
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All content for Only Human – News, Analysis, and Insights from the World of Human Performance is the property of Dr. Tony Kern and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Over the last few years, we’ve pursued the goal of bridging the gap between who you are today and who you are capable of being by focusing on reducing human error and improving human performance from a mostly philosophical stance. Starting today, we’re centering practical application and real-world scenarios through the lens of the strategies and techniques we’ve been discussing. In this episode, Tony reviews an altercation between on-duty air traffic controllers at Ronald Reagan Airport, the experiences shared recently by the astronauts who were stranded on the International Space Station for
Show more...
Self-Improvement
Education
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Achieve Simplicity by Front-loading Complexity
Only Human – News, Analysis, and Insights from the World of Human Performance
19 minutes 46 seconds
5 months ago
Achieve Simplicity by Front-loading Complexity

In this week’s episode of the podcast, Tony reflects on this weekend’s B-2 bomber mission that saw multiple stealth aircraft launch from a Missouri Air Force base, fly over to Iran to drop bombs, and then safely return to the same base. A mission of this length—likely 35–40 hours from pre-flight to post-flight duties—puts a heavy burden on the air crew executing the mission, with the perils of fatigue, risk management, and moment-to-moment decision making in a combat zone all requiring significant planning to handle. Tony performs a preliminary dissection on the considerations that go into planning missions like this, using his own experience on the B-1 and his dissertation on long-range missions as the starting point. Tony’s conclusion is that no matter how complex the operation is, the goal of the plan should be to make execution by the crew as simple as possible—and this is a philosophy that applies to all human performance, not just high-stakes military missions. So, achieve simplicity in your own performance by front-loading the complexity into the planning phase.

Only Human – News, Analysis, and Insights from the World of Human Performance
Over the last few years, we’ve pursued the goal of bridging the gap between who you are today and who you are capable of being by focusing on reducing human error and improving human performance from a mostly philosophical stance. Starting today, we’re centering practical application and real-world scenarios through the lens of the strategies and techniques we’ve been discussing. In this episode, Tony reviews an altercation between on-duty air traffic controllers at Ronald Reagan Airport, the experiences shared recently by the astronauts who were stranded on the International Space Station for