NTL Record

Title Visual search performance during simulated radar observation with and without sweepline.
Record ID 39375
Personal Name
Creator
Thackray, Richard I.; Touchstone, R. Mark
Corporate Creator Civil Aeromedical Institute
Corporate
Contributor
United States. Office of Aviation Medicine
Publisher Civil Aerospace Medical Institute
Publication Date 19790000
Language English
Abstract A study was conducted to determine whether or not the presence or absence of a radar sweepline influences attentional processes and, hence, the speed with which critical stimuli can be detected. The visual display was designed to approximate an advanced, highly automated air traffic control radar display containing computer-generated alphanumeric symbols. Twenty-eight men and women, paid volunteers with no previous air traffic controller experience, were tested over a 2-hour session with half of the subjects assigned to the sweep condition and half to the no-sweep condition. Sixteen targets appeared on the screen at all times, with 10 signals (a designed change in the alphanumerics) randomly presented during each 1/2-hour of the test session. Mean detection latencies, long detection times, and missed signals all increased significantly over the task session. Although the no-sweep appeared to be generally superior to the sweep condition in all measures of detection efficiency, none of the differences was significant. Concomitantly recorded measures of saccadic eye movements revealed a pattern of change in mean fixation duration which paralleled the patterns of change in performance during the task session. However, as with performance, mean fixation durations for the sweep and no-sweep conditions did not differ, nor were individual differences in scanning activity related to performance. Possible reasons for the lack of relationship between scanning activity and performance are discussed.
Rosap ID dot:21163
Rosap URL https://rosap.ntl.bts.gov/view/dot/21163
TRT Terms Air traffic control; Automated radar terminal system; Attention; Eye movements; Performance; Vigilance; Automation; Monitoring; Physiological fatigue; Experiments; Human subject testing
General Subjects Air traffic control; Radar air traffic control systems--Automation; Attention; Vigilance (Psychology); Fatigue; Performance; Eye--Movements
Classification NTL - AVIATION - Air Traffic Control;
NTL - AVIATION - Aviation Human Factors
Geographical
Coverage
United States
Report Number FAA-AM-79-12; DOT/FAA/AM-79/12
Resource type Tech Report
URL https://ntlrepository.blob.core.windows.net/lib/39000/39300/39375/AM79-12.pdf
Format PDF
Database NTL Digital Repository