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Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of ecological interface design for nuclear process control: situation awareness effects.

TLDR
The observed improvement was sufficiently large to suggest that EID could improve situation awareness in situations where procedures are unavailable, and suggests that the approach requires further development, particularly in integrating EID with procedural support.
Abstract
Objective: We determine whether an ecological interface display for nuclear power plant operations supports improved situation awareness over traditional and user-centered displays in a realistic environment. Background: Ecological interface design (EID) has not yet been fully evaluated with real operators facing realistic scenarios. Method: Ecological displays were evaluated alongside traditional and user-centered “advanced” displays in a full-scope nuclear power plant simulation. Licensed plant operators used the displays in realistic scenarios that either had procedural support or did not have procedural support. All three displays were evaluated for their ability to support operator situation awareness. Results: A significant three-way interaction effect was observed on two independent measures of situation awareness. For both measures, ecological displays improved situation awareness in scenarios that did not have procedural support, primarily in the detection phases of those scenarios. No other pron...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Human performance consequences of stages and levels of automation: an integrated meta-analysis.

TL;DR: Results support the proposed cost–benefit trade-off with regard to DOA and suggest that routine performance and workload, and the potential loss of SA and manual skills on the other hand, directly trade off and that appropriate function allocation can serve only one of the two aspects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Defining the methodological challenges and opportunities for an effective science of sociotechnical systems and safety

TL;DR: An up-to-date review of STS methods, a set of case studies illustrating their use and an evaluation of their strengths and weaknesses are provided, as well as a ‘roadmap’ for future work.
Journal ArticleDOI

Situation awareness on the road: review, theoretical and methodological issues, and future directions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a review of road transport-related situation awareness (SA) applications and discuss, from a theoretical and methodological viewpoint, issues requiring clarification in this context.
Journal ArticleDOI

Designing sociotechnical systems with cognitive work analysis: putting theory back into practice

TL;DR: The optimal AH is used to assess the extent to which current CWA-based design practices, uncovered through a survey of CWA practitioners, aligns with sociotechnical systems theory, and recommendations for a design toolkit are specified.
Book ChapterDOI

Potential Solutions to Human Factors Challenges in Road Vehicle Automation

TL;DR: This chapter elaborates on a Human Factors breakout session at the 2015 “Automated Vehicles Symposium” that addressed issues on how humans will interact with automated technologies, particularly considering that a wide variety of designs are either under development or already deployed.
References
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Book

Experimental Design: Procedures for the Behavioral Sciences

Roger E. Kirk
TL;DR: This chapter discusses research strategies and the Control of Nuisance Variables, as well as randomly Randomized Factorial Design with Three or More Treatments and Randomized Block Factorial design, and Confounded Factorial Designs: Designs with Group-Interaction Confounding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a Theory of Situation Awareness in Dynamic Systems

TL;DR: A theoretical model of situation awareness based on its role in dynamic human decision making in a variety of domains is presented and design implications for enhancing operator situation awareness and future directions for situation awareness research are explored.
Book

Skills, rules, and knowledge; signals, signs, and symbols, and other distinctions in human performance models

TL;DR: In this paper, a discussion of the requirement for different types of models for representing performance at the skill-, rule-, and knowledge-based levels, together with a review of the different levels in terms of signals, signs, and symbols is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Skills, rules, and knowledge; signals, signs, and symbols, and other distinctions in human performance models

TL;DR: A discussion is presented of the requirement for different types of models for representing performance at the skill-, rule-, and knowledge-based levels, together with a review of the different levels in terms of signals, signs, and symbols.