scholarly journals Distributed situation awareness: From awareness in individuals and teams to the awareness of technologies, sociotechnical systems, and societies

2022 ◽  
Vol 98 ◽  
pp. 103599
Author(s):  
Paul M. Salmon ◽  
Katherine L. Plant
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (24) ◽  
pp. 13915
Author(s):  
Matthieu Vert ◽  
Alexei Sharpanskykh ◽  
Richard Curran

Resilience is commonly understood as the capacity for a system to maintain a desirable state while undergoing adversity or to return to a desirable state as quickly as possible after being impacted. In this paper, we focus on resilience for complex sociotechnical systems (STS), specifically those where safety is an important aspect. Two main desiderata for safety-critical STS to be resilient are adaptive capacity and adaptation. Formal studies integrating human cognition and social aspects are needed to quantify the capacity to adapt and the effects of adaptation. We propose a conceptual framework to elaborate on the concept of resilience of safety-critical STS, based on adaptive capacity and adaptation and how this can be formalized. A set of mechanisms is identified that is necessary for STS to have the capacity to adapt. Mechanisms belonging to adaptive capacity include situation awareness, sensemaking, monitoring, decision-making, coordination, and learning. It is posited that the two mechanisms required to perform adaptation are anticipation and responding. This framework attempts to coherently integrate the key components of the multifaceted concept of STS Equationsadaptive resilience. This can then be used to pursue the formal representation of Equationsadaptive resilience, its modeling, and its operationalization in real-world safety-critical STS.


Author(s):  
Chanel Macabante ◽  
Sherry Wei ◽  
David Schuster

Cybersecurity has large-scale versions of the challenges common to sociotechnical systems; in this high-risk, dynamic environment, attacks on organizations and governments are increasing in frequency, sophistication, and severity. In this paper, we summarize existing understanding of situation awareness in cybersecurity and propose additional factors that reflect emerging technology in the domain, incorporate the rising role of automation in cybersecurity, and are relevant to diverse organizations. To do this, we apply a distributed, sociotechnical systems approach to SA and consider the importance of multiteam cognition. Finally, we describe strategies for measurement to support future empirical research in cybersecurity.


Author(s):  
Ashley A. Cain ◽  
Tamsyn Edwards ◽  
David Schuster

As team structures evolve and become more complex, with human and automated agents working together to accomplish team goals, measurement approaches for system situation awareness must also adapt. This paper proposes a novel approach to the measurement of SA for human automation teams. Limitations of existing individual SA measurement approaches are highlighted with a particular focus on the sensitivity of current measures to knowledge held across human and automated agents in complex sociotechnical systems. We propose that elements from team communication data can be used as a basis for the quantification of shared and complementary situation awareness. We present a conceptual measurement approach for using communication data to measure shared and complementary situation awareness for human-automation teams, appropriate for both open or closed loop communication. This paper discusses how such a measurement approach would be applied specifically for human-automation teams, including automation that functions as decision aids, as managers, and automation that learns with the human operator, and discusses implications of our measure for training and design.


2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Parsa Mirhaji ◽  
S. Lillibridge ◽  
R. Richesson ◽  
J. Zhang ◽  
J. Smith

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