DocumentCode
3294262
Title
Haptic specification of environmental events: implications for the design of adaptive, virtual interfaces
Author
Brickman, Bart J. ; Hettinger, Lawrence J. ; Roe, Merry M. ; Lu, Liem ; Repperger, Daniel W. ; Haas, Michael W.
Author_Institution
Logicon Tech. Services Inc., Dayton, OH, USA
fYear
1996
fDate
30 Mar-3 Apr 1996
Firstpage
147
Lastpage
153
Abstract
Future airborne crewstations are currently being designed that will incorporate multisensory virtual displays to convey operationally relevant information to crew members. In addition, these displays and associated controls will be designed to adapt to the changing psychological and physiological state of the user, and the tactical/environmental state of the external world. In support of this design goal, research is being conducted to explore the information extraction capabilities of the sensory modalities. Toward this end, an experiment was conducted to assess the degree to which force-reflective haptic stimulation can be used to provide individuals with information about their location and movement through space. Specifically, a force-reflecting, haptically-augmented aircraft control stick was designed and utilized with the goal of providing pilots with real-time information concerning lateral deviation (or “line-up”) with respect to the runway in a simulated instrument landing task. Pilots executed simulated landing approaches with either the force-reflecting stick or a standard aircraft displacement stick under either calm or turbulent conditions. The results indicated a consistent advantage in performance and perceived workload for the force-reflecting stick, particularly under conditions of simulated turbulence. The results are discussed in terms of their relevance for the design of advanced airborne crewstations that utilize multisensory, adaptive, virtual interfaces
Keywords
aerospace computing; aircraft displays; human factors; psychology; real-time systems; systems analysis; user interfaces; virtual reality; adaptive virtual interfaces; airborne crewstations; aircraft control stick; aircraft displacement stick; environmental events; force-reflective haptic stimulation; haptic specification; multisensory virtual displays; performance; physiological state; psychological state; real-time information; simulated instrument landing task; user interface design; virtual reality; Aerospace control; Aircraft; Data mining; Displays; Haptic interfaces; Information resources; Instruments; Surgery; Vehicle dynamics; Virtual environment;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Virtual Reality Annual International Symposium, 1996., Proceedings of the IEEE 1996
Conference_Location
Santa Clara, CA
Print_ISBN
0-8186-7296-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/VRAIS.1996.490522
Filename
490522
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