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Human Control of Systems Chap 10. Human Control of Systems ► Compatibility   ► Tracking   ► Supervisory Control  

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Presentation on theme: "Human Control of Systems Chap 10. Human Control of Systems ► Compatibility   ► Tracking   ► Supervisory Control  "— Presentation transcript:

1 Human Control of Systems Chap 10

2 Human Control of Systems ► Compatibility   ► Tracking   ► Supervisory Control  

3 Compatibility  Degree to which relationships are consistent with human expectations  Compatibility   learning , error , RT , Compatibility   satisfaction   相容性有各種不同程度;有可能互相矛盾 ► Spatial Compatibility ► Movement Compatibility

4 Compatibility − Spatial ► Physical Similarity of Displays and Controls  Signal panels & Response panels Fig 10-1 Fig 10-1 Fig 10-1  Function keys: monitor – keyboard Fig 10-2 Fig 10-2 Fig 10-2 ► Physical Arrangement of Displays and Controls  Control-burner arrangements of stove Fig 10-3 Tab 10-1 Fig 10-3Tab 10-1 Fig 10-3Tab 10-1  Performance≠ Chosen ( II > III ) ( III > II ) ( II > III ) ( III > II )  Sensor lines  error=0, but RT > offset (I) Fig 10-4 Fig 10-4 Fig 10-4

5 Compatibility ► Movement Compatibility  Rotary Controls and Rotary Displays in the Same Plane  Rotary Controls and Linear Displays in the Same Plane  Movement of Displays and Controls in Different Planes  Movement Relationships of Rotary Vehicular Controls  Movement Relationships of Power Switches  Orientation of the Operator and Movement Relationships  Discussion

6 Compatibility − Movement ► Rotary Controls and Rotary Displays in the Same Plane  Fixed Scale Clockwise turn of Control  Clockwise turn of Display (pointer) (increase the value)  Fixed Pointer Fig 10-5 Fig 10-5 Fig 10-5 − 1. Scale rotate = Movement of Control − 2. Scale: L  R  increase − 3. Clockwise (control)  increase 重要性: 1>2>3 重要性: 1>2>3

7 Compatibility − Movement ► Rotary Controls and Linear Displays in the Same Plane Fig 10-6 Fig 10-6 Fig 10-6  Warrick’s Principle  Scale-side Principle  Clockwise – for – Increase Principle

8 Compatibility − Movement ► Movement of Displays and Controls in Different Planes  Control: rotary − Clockwise – for – Increase Principle − 螺絲類比: Clockwise  away from Counterclockwise  toward Counterclockwise  toward  Stick-type Control Fig 10-7 Fig 10-7 Fig 10-7 − Best: Up-Up, Down-Down − Worst: Up-Down  Recommended Fig 10-8 Fig 10-8 Fig 10-8  Safer: fore-up, aft-down

9 Compatibility − Movement ► Movement Relationships of Rotary Vehicular Controls Fig 10-9 Fig 10-9 Fig 10-9  Most vehicles  Shuttle cars for underground coal mines ► Movement Relationships of Power Switches  On: Up (chosen: 97%) > Right (71%) > Away (52%)

10 Compatibility − Movement ► Orientation of the Operator and Movement Relationships Fig 10-10 Fig 10-10 Fig 10-10  1. Control-Display Compatibility  2. Visual-Motor Compatibility  3. Visual-Trunk Compatibility 重要性: 2 (V-M) > 3 (V-T) > 1(C-D) 重要性: 2 (V-M) > 3 (V-T) > 1(C-D)

11 Compatibility − Movement ► Discussion  Not universal  Standardized; logical & explainable relationship  Empirical test

12 Tracking ► Inputs and Outputs in Tracking ► Pursuit and Compensatory Displays in Tracking ► Control Order of Systems ► Control Responses with Various Control Orders ► Human Limitations in Tracking Tasks ► Factors That Influence Tracking Performance ► Procedures for Facilitating Tracking Performance

13 Tracking  An input specifies the desired output of the system ► Inputs and Outputs in Tracking  Inputs − Can be constant or variable − Received directly from environment − Input signal = Target − Movement of target = Course − Elementary inputs: sine, step, ramp Fig 10-11 Fig 10-11 Fig 10-11  Outputs

14 Tracking ► Inputs and Outputs in Tracking  Inputs  Outputs − Display: follower, cursor − Outward behavior of the system (e.g. car) − Controlled element ( 上述兩項的總稱 )

15 Tracking ► Pursuit and Compensatory Displays in Tracking  Target = Controlled element : “On target” Fig 10-12 Fig 10-12 Fig 10-12  Pursuit: 呈現 Target & Controlled element  Compensatory: 只呈現 difference  Pursuit 之優點 − 可分離 Movement of target, controlled element − 可看到 Target course  Compensatory 之優點: 節省空間

16 Tracking ► Control Order of Systems Hierarchy of control relationships between the movement of the control & the output it controls  Position (Zero-Order) Control  Rate (First-Order) Control  Acceleration (Second-Order) Control  Higher-Order Control − Sequence of chain-reaction effect

17 Tracking ► Control Responses with Various Control Orders Fig 10-11 Fig 10-11 Fig 10-11  Zero-order, 1st-order: 佳  2nd-order:   原因 − H igher-order 動作多 − (e.g.) step input

18 Tracking ► Human Limitations in Tracking Tasks  Processing Time − Zero-, 1st-order: 150-300 ms − 2nd-order: 400-500 ms  Bandwidth ( 變化頻率) − 0.5 ~ 1 Hz (Central processing limit)  Anticipation − Higher-order: 差

19 Tracking ► Factors That Influence Tracking Performance  Preview of Track Ahead − Immediately procede ( 0.5 s) > Lagged preview − Enable operator to compensate for time lags  Type of Display: Pursuit vs. Compensatory − Pursuit > Compensatory Tab10-2 Fig 10-13 Tab10-2Fig 10-13 Tab10-2Fig 10-13 − 原因: separate effect, greater movement compatibility − Digital display: no difference

20 Tracking ► Factors That Influence Tracking Performance  Time Lags in Tracking − Degrade operator performance − Working memory & Anticipate future event  − Types: Response lag, Control-system lag Fig 10-14, Display-system lag Fig 10-14 Fig 10-14  Specificity of Displayed Error in Tracking − Specificity   Performance  Fig 10-16 Fig 10-16 Fig 10-16  Paced vs. Self-Paced Tracking − Self-Paced > Paced

21 Tracking ► Procedures for Facilitating Tracking Performance  Aiding (effect: limited)  Predictor Displays *** − Present state + Predicted future state − (e.g.) submarine, airplane landing Fig 10-17 10-18 Fig 10-1710-18 Fig 10-1710-18  Quickening − 只呈現 future consequences − 缺點:不知當時,錯誤 on target 印象

22 Supervisory Control  Degree of automation Tab 10-3 Tab 10-3 Tab 10-3 ► Supervisory Roles ► Future Implications of Supervisory Control

23 Supervisory Control ► Supervisory Roles  Sheridan (1987): 5 major categories of behaviors − Planning − Teaching − Monitoring − Intervening − Learning (troubleshooting)  Behavior Taxonomy of Rasmussen (1983) − Skill-based (Information as Signal) − Rule-based (Sign) − Knowledge-based (Symbol: conceptual model, mental model)

24 Supervisory Control ► Future Implications of Supervisory Control  Less capable of intervening in the control of the system during an emergency  Lack the necessary skills required to take control  Possibility of human error during an emergency: increase  Long-term Social Implications (Sheridan, 1980, 1987)

25 Supervisory Control ► Future Implications of Supervisory Control  Long-term Social Implications (Sheridan, 1980, 1987) — Unemployment — Desocialization — Remoteness from the product — Deskilling — Intimidation ( 脅迫 ): 犯錯  代價  — Discomfort in the assumption of power — Technological illiteracy — Mystification — Sense of not being productive — Eventual abandonment of responsibility


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