Affiliation:
1. Swedish Defence Research Agency, FOI Dept. of Man-System-Interaction Linköping, Sweden
Abstract
We investigated three types of display combinations for threat cueing in a simulated combat vehicle. The display combinations consisted of two bimodal combinations, a visual head-up display (HUD) combined with 3D audio; a tactile torso belt combined with 3D audio; and a multimodal combination, the HUD, tactile belt, and 3D audio combined. The participant's main task was to as fast as possible align the heading of the combat vehicle with the displayed direction to a threat. To increase general task difficulty and provide a secondary measure of mental workload, the participant also was required to identify radio calls. Threat localization accuracy was highest and reaction time shortest with the use of both the HUD combined with 3D audio and with the multimodal display. Subjective ratings of perception of initial threat direction were most positive for both the tactile belt combined with 3D audio and for the multimodal display. The ratings of perceived threat direction at the final phase of threat alignment, however, were most positive for the HUD combined with 3D audio and for the multimodal display. Thus, the multimodal display with HUD, tactile belt, and 3D audio combined proved to be beneficial for all measures.
Subject
General Medicine,General Chemistry
Cited by
3 articles.
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1. Tactile Torso Display For Fighter Pilots – Wing-Oriented And Horizon-Oriented Presentation;Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting;2013-09
2. Supporting Interruption Management and Multimodal Interface Design;Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society;2013-02-20
3. Enhanced Perception and Performance by Multimodal Threat Cueing in Simulated Combat Vehicle;Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society;2011-12-07