Monitoring an Automated System for a Single Failure: Vigilance and Task Complexity Effects
- 1 June 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
- Vol. 38 (2) , 311-322
- https://doi.org/10.1177/001872089606380211
Abstract
The present study examined the effects of task complexity and time on task on the monitoring of a single automation failure during performance of a complex flight simulation task involving tracking, fuel management, and engine-status monitoring. Two groups of participants performed either all three flight simulation tasks simultaneously (multicomplex task) or the monitoring task alone (single-complex task); a third group performed a simple visual vigilance task (simple task). For the multicomplex task, monitoring for a single failure of automation control was poorer than when participants monitored engine malfunctions under manual control. Furthermore, more participants detected the automation failure in the first 10 min of a 30-min session than in the last 10 min of the session, for both the simple and the multicomplex task. Participants in the single-complex condition detected the automation failure equally well in both periods. The results support previous findings of inefficiency in monitoring automation and show that automation-related monitoring inefficiency occurs even when there is a single automation failure. Implications for theories of vigilance and automation design are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Performance Consequences of Automation-Induced 'Complacency'The International Journal of Aviation Psychology, 1993
- Trust, control strategies and allocation of function in human-machine systemsErgonomics, 1992
- A Dynamic Model of Stress and Sustained AttentionHuman Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, 1989
- Criticisms of Vigilance Research: A DiscussionHuman Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, 1987
- Interaction of signal discriminability and task type in vigilance decrementPerception & Psychophysics, 1987
- The causes of causes: determinants and background variables of human factor incidents and accidentsErgonomics, 1986
- Experiments on the Validity of Vigilance ExperimentsPublished by Springer Nature ,1977
- Examination of some factors influencing performance on an auditory monitoring task with one signal per session.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1970
- Influence of signal probability during pretraining on vigilance decrement.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1967
- Complex monitoring and its relation to the classical problem of vigilanceOrganizational Behavior and Human Performance, 1966