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Journal Article

Citation

Tole JR, Stephens AT, Harris RL, Ephrath AR. Aviat. Space Environ. Med. 1982; 53(1): 54-61.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1982, Aerospace Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

7055491

Abstract

This paper describes an experimental paradigm and a set of preliminary results which demonstrate a relationship between the level of performance on a skilled man-machine control task, the skill of the operator, the level of mental difficulty induced by an additional task imposed on the basic control task, and visual scanning performance. During a constant, simulated piloting task, visual scanning of instruments was found to vary as a function of the level of difficulty of a verbal loading task. The average dwell time of each fixation on the pilot's primary instrument increased as a function of the loading. The scanning behavior was also a function of the estimated skill level of the pilots, with novices being affected by the loading task much more than experts. The results suggest that visual scanning of instruments in a controlled task may be an indicator of both workload and skill.


Language: en

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