Definition
Unintended back-and-forth aircraft movements (typically in pitch) that result from the pilot's own control inputs becoming out of phase with the aircraft's response. Each correction overshoots, leading to an opposite correction that also overshoots, producing a worsening oscillation rather than a stable recovery.
Plain English
A bouncing or porpoising motion the pilot accidentally creates by over-correcting on the controls. Each correction comes a beat too late and is too strong, so the aircraft swings the other way, and the next correction makes it worse.
Context Anchor
Seen in discussions of aircraft handling problems, including tailplane icing and tailplane stall symptoms, where pitch control may feel unusual or unstable.
Derivation
Called "pilot induced" because the cause is the pilot's own inputs, not the aircraft or weather. "Oscillation" comes from the Latin oscillare, meaning to swing — like a pendulum swinging back and forth past the middle.
Why Pilots Care
Unrecognized PIO can quickly lead to loss of control, especially when ice has already altered handling.
Analogy
It is like pushing a swing at the wrong moment. Even if you are trying to stop it, poorly timed pushes can keep the swing moving or make it swing higher.
Grounding Statement
Picture the nose starting to bob up and down while each control correction comes just late enough to feed the next bob.
Intuition Check
Do not read “pilot induced” as meaning the pilot is doing it on purpose. It means the pilot’s well-meant corrections are accidentally causing or increasing the motion.
Example Sentence 1
When the tailplane stall caused an unexpected pitch-down, the pilot's aggressive corrections turned into pilot induced oscillations until he relaxed his grip on the yoke.
Example Sentence 2
Reducing control pressure stopped the pilot induced oscillations and returned the aircraft to stable flight.