Affiliation:
1. George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia,
2. Berlin Institute of Technology, Berlin, Germany
Abstract
Objective: Our aim was to review empirical studies of complacency and bias in human interaction with automated and decision support systems and provide an integrated theoretical model for their explanation. Background: Automation-related complacency and automation bias have typically been considered separately and independently. Methods: Studies on complacency and automation bias were analyzed with respect to the cognitive processes involved. Results: Automation complacency occurs under conditions of multiple-task load, when manual tasks compete with the automated task for the operator’s attention. Automation complacency is found in both naive and expert participants and cannot be overcome with simple practice. Automation bias results in making both omission and commission errors when decision aids are imperfect.Automation bias occurs in both naive and expert participants, cannot be prevented by training or instructions, and can affect decision making in individuals as well as in teams.While automation bias has been conceived of as a special case of decision bias, our analysis suggests that it also depends on attentional processes similar to those involved in automation-related complacency. Conclusion: Complacency and automation bias represent different manifestations of overlapping automation-induced phenomena, with attention playing a central role. An integrated model of complacency and automation bias shows that they result from the dynamic interaction of personal, situational, and automation-related characteristics. Application: The integrated model and attentional synthesis provides a heuristic framework for further research on complacency and automation bias and design options for mitigating such effects in automated and decision support systems.
Subject
Behavioral Neuroscience,Applied Psychology,Human Factors and Ergonomics
Reference119 articles.
1. Effects of incorrect computer-aided detection (CAD) output on human decision-making in mammography
2. CAD in mammography: lesion-level versus case-level analysis of the effects of prompts on human decisions
3. Bagheri, N. & Jamieson, G.A. (2004). Considering subjective trust and monitoring behavior in assessing automation-induced ‘‘complacency ." In D. A. Vicenzi, M. Mouloua, & O. A. Hancock (Eds.), Human performance, situation awareness, and automation: Current research and trends (pp. 54-59). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
4. Misuse of automated decision aids: Complacency, automation bias and the impact of training experience
Cited by
761 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