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Journal Article

Citation

Laurie-Rose C, Curtindale LM, Frey M. Hum. Factors 2017; 59(1): 76-90.

Affiliation

Otterbein University, Westerville, Ohio.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0018720816684063

PMID

28146678

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We examined the effects of spatial uncertainty, field dependence/independence (FD/I), and sex on vigilance performance and perceived workload in elementary school children.

BACKGROUND: Building on previous work in which children demonstrated their ability to evaluate workload, we tested whether spatial-uncertainty manipulations in a vigilance task would elicit in children the same deleterious effects on performance and workload as it does with adults. We also examined individual difference effects associated with FD/I and sex to determine their influence on both performance and workload.

METHOD: In the low-uncertainty task, stimuli appeared in the center of the computer screen; in the high-uncertainty task, they appeared in one of the four quadrants of the screen. Neutral events consisted of uppercase letter strings. Critical signals consisted of a single lowercase letter among uppercase letters. Following each vigil, children completed a workload assessment via a modified version of the NASA Task Load Index.

RESULTS: Children showed lower perceptual sensitivity, greater response latency variability (RT(SD)), and a higher response criterion in the uncertain display condition. Workload scores reflected these performance differences. Field-dependent children showed lower perceptual sensitivity and greater RT(SD) than did field-independent children. The two groups exhibited differing workload profiles. Despite no objective performance differences, boys reported greater workload than girls.

CONCLUSION: The scale demonstrated sensitivity and diagnosticity with regard to both the task variable and individual differences. APPLICATION: These findings contribute to the emerging field of "educational ergonomics" and indicate that appropriate assessment tools might identify children who are experiencing increased workload.


Language: en

Keywords

NASA Task Load Index; educational ergonomics; sustained attention; vigilance; workload

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