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Interaction of Automation Visibility and Information Quality in Flight Deck Information Automation View Document
IEEE Transactions on Human-Machine Systems
  • Michael C. Dorneich, Iowa State University
  • Rachel Dudley, Iowa State University
  • Emmanuel Letsu-Dake, Honeywell International
  • William Rogers, Honeywell Laboratories
  • Stephen D. Whitlow, Honeywell Laboratories
  • Michael Dillard, Honeywell Laboratories
  • Erik Nelson, Honeywell Laboratories
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Accepted Manuscript
Publication Date
7-14-2017
DOI
10.1109/THMS.2017.2717939
Abstract

An empirical study evaluated key human factors issues related to automation visibility and information quality, based on a refined definition of information automation. Next-generation air transportation system operational concepts will dramatically affect the types and amount of information available on flight decks. Information automation systems collect, process, and present information to support pilot tasks and awareness. The definition of flight deck information automation was refined to differentiate it from other types of automation. Pilots interacted with an example information automation system to investigate the premise that automation visibility will have an impact on the ability of pilots to detect problems resulting from poor information quality. Poor information quality appeared to be difficult for pilots to detect, even when presented with high automation visibility. Pilots tended to over-trust automation, so when reporting high workload and information was missing, they chose the top plan suggested by the automation even though it was not the best. Trust in automation was reduced by low information quality, but compensated for by increased automation visibility. Added information to help pilots understand information automation state and outputs, given a level of information quality, should be balanced against potential increases in pilot workload due to the time and attention needed to process the extra information.

Comments

This is a manuscript of an article published as Dorneich, Michael C., Rachel Dudley, Emmanuel Letsu-Dake, William Rogers, Stephen D. Whitlow, Michael C. Dillard, and Erik Nelson. "Interaction of Automation Visibility and Information Quality in Flight Deck Information Automation." IEEE Transactions on Human-Machine Systems (2017), doi:10.1109/THMS.2017.2717939. Posted with permission.

Rights
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Copyright Owner
IEEE
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Michael C. Dorneich, Rachel Dudley, Emmanuel Letsu-Dake, William Rogers, et al.. "Interaction of Automation Visibility and Information Quality in Flight Deck Information Automation View Document" IEEE Transactions on Human-Machine Systems (2017)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/michael_dorneich/113/