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Journal Article

Citation

Matthews G, de Winter JCF, Hancock PA. Theor. Issues Ergonomics Sci. 2020; 21(4): 369-396.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/1463922X.2018.1547459

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

We examine the continuing use of subjective workload responses to index an operator's state, either by themselves or as part of a collective suite of measurements. Lack of convergence of subjective scales with physiological and performance-based measures calls into question whether there is any unitary workload construct that underpins conscious experience, physiological state and the individual's profile of task-related performance. We examine philosophical and measurement perspectives on the divergence problem, and we consider three possible solutions. First, difficulties in reliable and valid measurement of workload may contribute to divergence but do not fully explain it. Second, workload may be treated operationally: use of specific measures is justified by demonstrating their pragmatic utility in predicting important outcomes. Third, further efforts may be made to develop representational workload measurements that correspond to real empirical phenomena. Application of formal standards for test validity can identify multiple latent constructs supporting subjective workload, including those defining self-regulation in performance contexts. Physiological and performance-based assessments may define additional, distinct constructs. A resolution of the diversity issue is crucial for ergonomics since the invalid application of workload measurement will threaten exposed operators as well as many others who are served by the complex technological systems they control.


Language: en

Keywords

Assessment measures; cognitive workload; convergence; psychometrics; validity

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