Likelihood Alarm Displays

Author:

Sorkin Robert D.1,Kantowitz Barry H.2,Kantowitz Susan C.3

Affiliation:

1. Behavioral Research Associates and Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana

2. Battelle Memorial Institute, Seattle, Washington

3. Behavioral Research Associates, West Lafayette, Indiana

Abstract

In a likelihood alarm display (LAD) information about event likelihood is computed by an automated monitoring system and encoded into an alerting signal for the human operator. Operator performance within a dual-task paradigm was evaluated with two LADs: a color-coded visual alarm and a linguistically coded synthetic speech alarm. The operator's primary task was one of tracking; the secondary task was to monitor a four-element numerical display and determine whether the data arose from a "signal" or "no-signal" condition. A simulated "intelligent" monitoring system alerted the operator to the likelihood of a signal. The results indicated that (1) automated monitoring systems can improve performance on primary and secondary tasks; (2) LADs can improve the allocation of attention among tasks and provide information integrated into operator decisions; and (3) LADs do not necessarily add to the operator's attentional load.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Applied Psychology,Human Factors and Ergonomics

Reference23 articles.

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4. Hanson, R. H., Payne, D. G., Shively, R. J., and Kantowitz, B. H. (1981). Process control simulation research in monitoring analog and digital displays. Proceedings of the Human Factors Society 25th Annual Meeting (pp. 154–158). Santa Monica, CA: Human Factors Society.

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