American and Japanese Control-Display Stereotypes: Possible Implications for Design of Space Station Systems

Author:

Wong Clifford K.1,Lyman John1

Affiliation:

1. Man-Machine-Environmental Engineering Laboratory University of California, Los Angeles 90024

Abstract

This study examined the stimulus-response stereotypes of American (United States citizens) and Japanese (Japanese citizens) subjects on the issue of control-display arrangements. Three questions were investigated. First, do Japanese and Americans operators adhere to the same compatibility principles, e.g., clockwise-for-increase, for certain configurations? Second, do the operators show similar or different responses to certain configurations? Third, are there arrangements in which both populations show strong or weak stimulus-response stereotypes? A paper and pencil test that contained 24 different control-display configurations was administered to 58 American subjects and 58 Japanese subjects, all of whom were right-handed. Out of the 24 configurations, only one elicited similar and statistically significant response stereotypes from American and Japanese subjects. The arrangement that did so emphasized that three compatibility principles (clockwise-for-increase, nearness of control-cursor relation, and scale-side) be in agreement with each other. The results provide initial, albeit speculative, guidelines for the design of control-display systems in NASA's international space station. Since multicultural crews will inhabit the space station for long duration missions, control-display designs which elicit common, consistent, and extremely strong control-movement stereotypes from different cultural populations is a necessity.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Population Stereotypes for Objects and Representations: Response Tendencies for Interacting With Everyday Objects and Interfaces;Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society;2019-01-28

2. A Cross-Cultural Survey of Personal Preferences in Design and Operation of a Lunar Base;Proceedings of the Human Factors Society Annual Meeting;1989-10

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