The effects of level of automation and adaptive automation on human performance, situation awareness and workload in a dynamic control task
North Carolina State University · SA Technologies (United States)
Abstract
This paper extends previous research on two approaches to human-centred automation: (1) intermediate levels of automation (LOAs) for maintaining operator involvement in complex systems control and facilitating situation awareness; and (2) adaptive automation (AA) for managing operator workload through dynamic control allocations between the human and machine over time. Some empirical research has been conducted to examine LOA and AA independently, with the objective of detailing a theory of human-centred automation. Unfortunately, no previous work has studied the interaction of these two approaches, nor has any research attempted to systematically determine which LOAs should be used in adaptive systems and how…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 16.58
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 56
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Workload
- Automation
- Task (project management)
- Situation awareness
- Computer science
- Control (management)
- Function (biology)
- Human–machine system