There Is More to Monitoring a Nuclear Power Plant than Meets the Eye

Author:

Mumaw Randall J.1,Roth Emilie M.2,Vicente Kim J.3,Burns Catherine M.4

Affiliation:

1. Boeing Commercial Airplane Group, Seattle, Washington

2. Roth Cognitive Engineering, Brookline, Massachusetts

3. University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

4. University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Canada

Abstract

A fundamental challenge in studying cognitive systems in context is how to move from the specific work setting studied to a more general understanding of distributed cognitive work and how to support it. We present a series of cognitive field studies that illustrate one response to this challenge. Our focus was on how nuclear power plant (NPP) operators monitor plant state during normal operating conditions. We studied operators at two NPPs with different control room interfaces. We identified strong consistencies with respect to factors that made monitoring difficult and the strategies that operators have developed to facilitate monitoring. We found that what makes monitoring difficult is not the need to identify subtle abnormal indications against a quiescent background, but rather the need to identify and pursue relevant findings against a noisy background. Operators devised proactive strategies to make important information more salient or reduce meaningless change, create new information, and off-load some cognitive processing onto the interface. These findings emphasize the active problem-solving nature of monitoring, and highlight the use of strategies for knowledge-driven monitoring and the proactive adaptation of the interface to support monitoring. Potential applications of this research include control room design for process control and alarm systems and user interfaces for complex systems.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Applied Psychology,Human Factors and Ergonomics

Reference29 articles.

1. SPECIAL SECTION: Adapting to New Technology in the Operating Room

2. Guerlain, S. & Bullemer, P. (1996). User-initiated notification: A concept for aiding the monitoring activities of process control operators. In Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 40th Annual Meeting (pp. 283–287). Santa Monica, CA: Human Factors and Ergonomics Society.

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