1st Edition

Human Performance in Automated and Autonomous Systems Current Theory and Methods

Edited By Mustapha Mouloua, Peter A. Hancock Copyright 2020
    340 Pages 44 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    This book examines recent advances in theories, models, and methods relevant to automated and autonomous systems. The following chapters provide perspectives on modern autonomous systems, such as self-driving cars and unmanned aerial systems, directly from the professionals working with and studying them. Current theories surrounding topics such as vigilance, trust, and fatigue are examined throughout as predictors of human performance in the operation of automated systems.

    The challenges related to attention and effort in autonomous vehicles described within give credence to still-developing methods of training and selecting operators of such unmanned systems. The book further recognizes the need for human-centered approaches to design; a carefully crafted automated technology that places the "human user" in the center of that design process.

     

    Features

    • Combines scientific theories with real-world applications where automated technologies are implemented
    • Disseminates new understanding as to how automation is now transitioning to autonomy
    • Highlights the role of individual and team characteristics in the piloting of unmanned systems and how models of human performance are applied in system design
    • Discusses methods for selecting and training individuals to succeed in an age of increasingly complex human-machine systems
    • Provides explicit benchmark comparisons of progress across the last few decades, and identifies future prognostications and the constraints that impinge upon these lines of progress

    Human Performance in Automated and Autonomous Systems: Current Theory and Methods illustrates the modern scientific theories and methods to be applied in real-world automated technologies.

    Chapter 1 Designing Wearable Interfaces for People Who Have Hard Jobs

    Matthew Ward, James Wen, James Head, & William S. Helton

    Chapter 2 Humans and Automated Decision Aids: A Match Made in Heaven?

    Kathleen L. Mosier & Dietrich Manzey

    Chapter 3 The Quest for Alternatives to “Levels of Automation” and “Task Allocation”

    Robert R. Hoffman & Matthew Johnson

    Chapter 4 Why Representations Matter: Designing to Support Productive Thinking

    John M. Flach & Kevin B. Bennett

    Chapter 5 Vigilance and Workload in Automated Systems: Patterns of Association, Dissociation, and Insensitivity

    James L. Szalma & Victoria L. Claypoole

    Chapter 6 Theoretical Perspectives on Adaptive Automation

    Mark W. Scerbo

    Chapter 7 Fatigue, Automation, and Autonomy: Challenges for Operator Attention, Effort, and Trust

    Gerald Matthews, Ryan Wohleber, Jinchao Lin, & April Rose Panganiban

    Chapter 8 Human-Automation Interaction and the Challenge of Maintaining Situation Awareness in Future

    Autonomous Vehicles

    Mica R. Endsley

    Chapter 9 Human Factors Issues Regarding Automation Trust in UAS Operation, Selection, and Training

    Mustapha Mouloua, James Ferraro, Alexandra Kaplan, Phillip Mangos, & Peter A. Hancock

    Chapter 10 Autonomous Systems Theory and Design and a Paradox of Automation for Safety

    David Kaber

    Chapter 11 Workload and Attention Management in Automated Vehicles

    Joonbum Lee, Vindhya Venkatraman, John L. Campbell, & Christian M. Richard

    Chapter 12 Attention Management in Highly Autonomous Driving

    Carryl L. Baldwin & Ian McCandliss

    Chapter 13 To Autonomy and Beyond

    Peter A. Hancock

    Chapter 14 Teleology for Technology

    Peter A. Hancock

    Chapter 15 The Axial Age of Artificial Autonomy

    Peter A. Hancock

    Biography

    Dr. Mouloua is Professor of Psychology at the University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida and was the Director (2009 –2017) and Associate Director (2006-2009) of the Applied/Experimental and Human Factors Psychology Doctoral Program, Director and Chief Scientist (2001-2014), Associate Director and Senior Research Scientist (1998-2001) of the Center for Applied Human Factors in Aviation, and Associate Director Human Factors Research at the Center for Advanced Transportation Systems Simulation (2001-2003).   Dr. Mouloua has over 30 years of experience in the field of Human Factors and Ergonomics.  His research interests include human-automation interaction, attention and workload, assessment of older drivers and pilots, UAS operation, selection, training, and simulation technologies across a variety of transportation systems.  Dr. Mouloua is the editor or co-editor  of several books including  Human Performance in Automated Systems: Current Research and Trends (1994, Erlbaum Press), Human-Automation Interaction: Research and Practice (1997, Erlbaum Press), Automation and Human Performance: Theory and Applications (1996, Erlbaum Press), Automation Technology and Human Performance: Current Research and Trends (1999, Erlbaum),  Human Factors in Simulation and Training (2009, Taylor & Francis Group), Automation and human performance: Theory, research, and practice (2004, Volumes  I & II;  Lawrence Erlbaum Associates), and Proceedings of the 2nd ACM Symposium on Computer Human Interaction for Management of Information Technology (ACM, CHIMIT,  2008).  Dr. Mouloua published over 190 papers and scientific reports and made over 300 presentations at various national and international meetings.   Dr. Mouloua was the recipient of the prestigious Jerome Ely (1997) and the Tidewater (1999) Awards from the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society.  At UCF, Dr.  Mouloua received eight prestigious Teaching and Research Awards including the recent Teaching Incentive Program Award (2015) and Research Incentive Award (2019) for his outstanding teaching and research contributions. Similarly, he was also a recipient of the UCF International Golden Key and Honorary Award (2011) and the UCF "Twenty Years of Service" Award (2014) for his dedicated work and commitment to students.  Dr. Mouloua is currently the Director of the Neurolinguistics, Aviation, and Driving Research Laboratories at UCF. 

    P.A. Hancock is Provost Distinguished Research Professor in the Department of Psychology and the Institute for Simulation and Training at the University of Central Florida (UCF) and is the author of over nine hundred refereed scientific articles. He has written and edited more than twenty-five books including Human Performance and Ergonomics (1999), Stress, Workload, and Fatigue (2001) and Performance under Stress (2008). He is a Fellow and past President of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, the Society of Engineering Psychologists as well as being a former Chair of the Board of the Society for Human Performance in Extreme Environments.