Workload variation, intrinsic risk and utility in a simulated air traffic control task: Evidence for compensatory effects

被引:25
|
作者
Desmond, PA
Hoyes, TW
机构
[1] Department of Psychology, University of Dundee
[2] Human Factors Research Group, Aston Business School, Aston University, Birmingham B4 7ET, Aston Triangle
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0925-7535(96)00008-2
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
Air traffic control operations provide a potential example of risk homeostasis theory (RHT) in a non-transportational domain. This paper addresses the issue of whether reductions in intrinsic risk can be negated by behavioural adjustments of operators. Following variations in mental workload, previous studies have suggested that air traffic controllers appear to adapt to changing demands through more active or more effective strategic control of performance. This effortful compensatory control of performance has the consequence of eliminating what would otherwise be concomitant variations in accident loss. However, most of the empirical support for this proposition is taken from observational studies in which the relative occurrence of different levels of workload is not controlled. Using a simulated air traffic control task, a study is reported here in which conditions of low, moderate and high levels of mental workload are presented in equal duration to participants. The findings indicate that number of errors differed significantly across these conditions of mental workload which is contrary to what RHT would predict Evidence is found for a general adaptation (or strategy switching) in response to different levels of workload. This supports earlier work in indicating that behavioural adjustments may not be of sufficient magnitude to restore previously existing levels of safety. However, on a notional measure of extrinsic compensation, participants did respond differently according to workload, thus lending limited support to RHT's prediction that utility and intrinsic risk should act in a multiplicative way to form a statistical interaction. Copyright (C) 1996 Elsevier Science Ltd
引用
收藏
页码:87 / 101
页数:15
相关论文
共 32 条
  • [1] Task Demand Variation in Air Traffic Control: Implications for Workload, Fatigue, and Performance
    Edwards, Tamsyn
    Gabets, Cynthia
    Mercer, Joey
    Bienert, Nancy
    [J]. ADVANCES IN HUMAN ASPECTS OF TRANSPORTATION, 2017, 484 : 91 - 102
  • [2] An Evidence Accumulation Model for Conflict Detection Performance in a Simulated Air Traffic Control Task
    Neal, Andrew
    Kwantes, Peter J.
    [J]. HUMAN FACTORS, 2009, 51 (02) : 164 - 180
  • [3] Workload state classification with automation during simulated air traffic control
    Kaber, David B.
    Perry, Carlene M.
    Segall, Noa
    Sheik-Nainar, Mohamed A.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AVIATION PSYCHOLOGY, 2007, 17 (04): : 371 - 390
  • [4] Psychophysiological responses to changes in workload during simulated air traffic control
    Brookings, JB
    Wilson, GF
    Swain, CR
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1996, 42 (03) : 361 - 377
  • [5] ICA-Derived EEG Correlates to Mental Fatigue, Effort, and Workload in a Realistically Simulated Air Traffic Control Task
    Dasari, Deepika
    Shou, Guofa
    Ding, Lei
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE, 2017, 11
  • [6] Task difficulty and physiological measures of mental workload in air traffic control: a scoping review
    Pagnotta, Murillo
    Jacobs, David M.
    de Frutos, Patricia L.
    Rodriguez, Ruben
    Ibanez-Gijon, Jorge
    Travieso, David
    [J]. ERGONOMICS, 2022, 65 (08) : 1095 - 1118
  • [7] Effects of Information Availability on Workload and Situation Awareness in Air Traffic Control
    Trapsilawati, Fitri
    Chen, Chun-Hsien
    [J]. TRANSDISCIPLINARY ENGINEERING: A PARADIGM SHIFT, 2017, 5 : 21 - 28
  • [8] The influence of aircraft proximity data on the subjective mental workload of controllers in the air traffic control task
    Lamoureux, T
    [J]. ERGONOMICS, 1999, 42 (11) : 1482 - 1491
  • [9] Cross-task cue utilisation and situational awareness in simulated air traffic control
    Falkland, Emma C.
    Wiggins, Mark W.
    [J]. APPLIED ERGONOMICS, 2019, 74 : 24 - 30
  • [10] Cardiovascular Biomarkers' Inherent Timescales in Mental Workload Assessment During Simulated Air Traffic Control Tasks
    Raduentz, Thea
    Muehlhausen, Thorsten
    Freyer, Marion
    Fuerstenau, Norbert
    Meffert, Beate
    [J]. APPLIED PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY AND BIOFEEDBACK, 2021, 46 (01) : 43 - 59