Verification of the Change Blindness Phenomenon While Managing Critical Events on a Combat Information Display
- 1 June 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
- Vol. 46 (2) , 205-218
- https://doi.org/10.1518/hfes.46.2.205.37340
Abstract
Change blindness occurs when humans are unable to detect significant changes in objects and scenes after their attention is momentarily diverted. Because change blindness is relevant in many applied settings, the current study investigated the phenomenon in the context of tasks performed by naval command and control system personnel. Operators of such systems are often heavily loaded with concurrent visual search, situation assessment, voice communications, and controldisplay maninpulation tasks at large, physically dispersed tactical situation displays. As the operators' attention shifts from one display to another, it creates an opportunity for changes to occur on unattended screens with potentially negative consequences. Our results show that on a display containing 8 objects of interest, considerable change blindness was demonstrated in that participants required 2 or more selections to correctly identify a changed object on nearly 1/3 of the test trials. Further, operator performance on 15% of the trials was equivalent to randomly guessing with replacement after making 3 incorrect selections. This research underscores the need for developing effective countermeasures to the change blindness phenomenon. Actual or potential uses of this research include interface design of computer workstations for military, nuclear power industry, air traffic control, crisis response center, and hospital emergency room applications.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Managing Critical Events in a Multimodal WatchstationProceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting, 2000
- The Role of Fixation Position in Detecting Scene Changes Across SaccadesPsychological Science, 1999
- Failure to detect changes to people during a real-world interactionPsychonomic Bulletin & Review, 1998
- Failure to detect changes to attended objects in motion picturesPsychonomic Bulletin & Review, 1997
- Change blindnessTrends in Cognitive Sciences, 1997
- To See or not to See: The Need for Attention to Perceive Changes in ScenesPsychological Science, 1997
- Memory Representations in Natural TasksJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1995
- Solving the "real" mysteries of visual perception: The world as an outside memory.Canadian Journal of Psychology / Revue canadienne de psychologie, 1992
- Group Interaction and Flight Crew PerformancePublished by Elsevier ,1988
- Detecting conjunctions of color and form: Reassessing the serial search hypothesisPerception & Psychophysics, 1987