
Why Aviation
Needs a Smarter
Safety Net
Human Error Is Still the #1 Cause of Aviation Accidents
Over 75% of incidents stem from human factors like loss of situational awareness, fatigue, and procedural lapses – not from a lack of technical skill.
The core issue? Subtle cognitive and physiological declines often go undetected during critical flight phases.
Source: ScienceDirect: Human Factors in Air Transport Accidents (2000–2016)
Current Monitoring Tools Are Inadequate
Fatigue check-ins and wellness self-assessments are subjective, easily manipulated or underreported, and often fail to catch early-stage, physical, cognitive or emotional decline that can compromise safety.
Lack of Real-Time, Data-Driven Health Insight
Despite advances in wearable tech, the industry still lacks an integrated system that uses real-time biomarkers – biochemical, electrophysiological, and emotional — to predict and prevent in-flight performance degradation.
Integrated
Platform
Mobile and web platform connecting to wearable devices worn by aviation professionals.
Multimodal
Monitoring
Mobile and web platform connecting to wearable devices worn by aviation professionals.
AI-Powered
Analytics
Detects patterns of cognitive fatigue before they impact flight safety.
Customisable
Dashboards
Tracks biochemical, electrophysiological, and emotional indicators.