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Journal Article

Citation

Tatasciore M, Bowden VK, Visser TAW, Michailovs SIC, Loft S. Hum. Factors 2019; ePub(ePub): 18720819867181.

Affiliation

The University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0018720819867181

PMID

31424968

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study is to examine the effects of low and high degree of automation (DOA) on performance, subjective workload, situation awareness (SA), and return-to-manual control in simulated submarine track management.

BACKGROUND: Theory and meta-analytic evidence suggest that as DOA increases, operator performance improves and workload decreases, but SA and return-to-manual control declines. Research also suggests that operators have particular difficulty regaining manual control if automation provides incorrect advice.

METHOD: Undergraduate student participants completed a submarine track management task that required them to track the position and behavior of contacts. Low DOA supported information acquisition and analysis, whereas high DOA recommended decisions. At a late stage in the task, automation was either unexpectedly removed or provided incorrect advice.

RESULTS: Relative to no automation, low DOA moderately benefited performance but impaired SA and non-automated task performance. Relative to no automation and low DOA, high DOA benefited performance and lowered workload. High DOA did impair non-automated task performance compared with no automation, but this was equivalent to low DOA. Participants were able to return-to-manual control when they knew low or high DOA was disengaged, or when high DOA provided incorrect advice.

CONCLUSION: High DOA improved performance and lowered workload, at no additional cost to SA or return-to-manual performance when compared with low DOA. APPLICATION: Designers should consider the likely level of uncertainty in the environment and the consequences of return-to-manual deficits before implementing low or high DOA.


Language: en

Keywords

automation; complacency; situation awareness; submarine track management; workload

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