scholarly journals Not all sensors are created equal: a framework for evaluating human performance measurement technologies

2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian Caulfield ◽  
Brenda Reginatto ◽  
Patrick Slevin
1987 ◽  
Vol 31 (6) ◽  
pp. 620-620
Author(s):  
Edward M. Connelly

Objectives: The objectives of this symposium are to identify fundamental performance measurement problems and to present theory, methods and application tools for assessing the impact of human performance on system performance. Further, case studies are used to illustrate the methods and tools. Finally, plans for development by government agencies of computer based processors implementing the tools are presented. Scientific Importance: Design and analysis of systems involving human operators have been hampered by the lack of performance based development tools. In order to assess the impact of human performance on system performance, it is first necessary to have a reliable and quantitative means for assessing overall system performance. Second, a means is required for relating human performance to the system performance. When these two types of tools are available and are used, systems can be designed to a prescribed performance standard. The papers in this session address fundamental performance measurement issues (including measurement reliability, sensitivity, and discrimination issues), as well as application methods and procedures.


1979 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 546-546
Author(s):  
Dorothy E. Fletcher

A human performance measurement system is described in terms of apparatus components, mini- and micro-computer control of test administration and data analysis, and experimental applications. At present, computer programs have been tested to administer and score twenty five performance tests, which were selected, modified, and/or developed to assess relatively independent perceptual, memory, cognitive, and psychomotor abilities. In the first experimental use of the system, six subjects were administered different subgroups of from three to five tests throughout one or both of two hyperbaric exposures while breathing normoxic helium. The first dive was to 1200 fsw (equivalent feet of sea water); the second, to 1600 fsw. In the second experiment, test standardization is proceeding with a group of young, adult males and with a larger and more heterogeneous adult group. Under normal laboratory conditions, equivalent forms of these tests are being compared with marker tests. The third experiment evaluates the effects upon an individual subject's pattern of abilities of changes in composition of inspired gases at sea level, in this case, changes in concentrations of N2O and O2. Future directions of development and application of this system are discussed.


1975 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 315-320
Author(s):  
Thomas J. Hammell ◽  
Alan J. Pesch ◽  
William P. Lane

A technique has been developed to'provide measurement of tactical decision-making performance. A comprehensibe mathematical model of the system provides an estimate of the system's effectiveness with regard to accomplishing specific interim and ultimate training and tactical objectives. The effectiveness estimate is based on particular system and situation parameters. The relationship between the operator/trainee's behavior and changes in the system parameters enables the system effectiveness values to provide a relative measure of human performance.


1996 ◽  
Vol 82 (2) ◽  
pp. 515-525 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kari Kauranen ◽  
Heikki Vanharanta

The purpose of this study was to collect reference data on different aspects of performance, including reaction time, speed of movement, tapping speed, and coordination of hands and feet using Human Performance Measurement/Basic Elements of Performance equipment and reports of reference data findings. Also, the reliability of the measurements is presented. 200 healthy, randomly selected subjects (100 men, 100 women; aged 21–70 years) were categorized by gender and by age decade into ten groups. The test battery consisted of six tests for both hands and feet. In general, the performance decreased clearly after 50 years in both genders. There were statistically significant differences between hands and feet, dominant and non-dominant sides, age groups, and number of choices, and especially between men and women.


1983 ◽  
Vol 27 (13) ◽  
pp. 1058-1062
Author(s):  
Brian W. Surgenor ◽  
John D. McGeachy

The application of a part-task nuclear simulator to the measurement of performance in the task of fault management was studied. Specifically, the design of the simulator was evaluated for internal and external validity. External validation required confirmation that the task presented by the simulator had the essential elements of the real task. In the context of this particular study, internal validation required confirmation that performance on the simulator represented an accurate and fair measure of a subject's understanding of fundamental principles. The requirements for external and internal validity were found to be in conflict. Performance on the simulator was not an accurate measure of fundamental understanding because the task was realistic. However, it was concluded that a part-task simulator does provide an effective method of gathering information on human performance.


1974 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 429-439
Author(s):  
William A. Spindell ◽  
Frederick G. Knirk

The problem of determining baselines for human performance measurement is neither peculiar to people concerned with military system performance nor to those associated with educational systems. It has traditionally been easier to compare performance of, for example, the experimental group to the control group or system “a” to system “b”, than it has been to determine some base of performance characteristic of a group of people and then to measure the effect of change from there. In education, the question of not only philosophical but very practical consequence is how do we know when someone is working at his level? Do attempts to standardize presentation methodology and time consider performer variations adequately? In engineering, the human factors specialist is also concerned with workload and overload in terms of system performance decrement. If the pilot of a high performance tactical fighter must perform a precise tracking task, and at the same time navigate and monitor his aircraft systems while subject to intense “g” loadings, and if he fails to do so, the concern is with the increment which resulted in this failure—i.e., which added duty or which increment of psychological or physiological stress was the last straw? Baseline performance measurement is confounded by other problems as well. The largest of these is the tremendous reserve capacity for both continued performance and dramatic performance increase found among humans at all age and ability levels. This is clearly a motivational artifact because, when so motivated, people can program their activities in such a way as to have enormously increased capacities for work or cognition. The overloaded pilot, suddenly faced with a fire warning indication, in seconds becomes a far more sophisticated analog computer than anything he has on-board, rapidly relegating certain tasks to low priority (e.g., navigation or energy management) and others to the highest priority (e.g., fault isolation, logic assessment of spurious indications). The child in the classroom, plodding along at one moment, is, in the next moment, able to take on vast increases in information when his interest is sparked. How can these baselines be measured when they are seemingly made of some superstretch material? How could capacities be quantified at some level so that one could know that the addition of some increment would or would not effect system performance learning or achievement? Over the years, techniques have developed in response to such engineering questions as: will control system “a” result in a greater workload than system “b”? These were typically performance based questions, since what was ultimately desired was some statement of how the above would influence mission performance. Similarly, educators have devised systems of measuring learner activity levels, but most dramatically, recent innovations in remote measurement of psychophysiological states perhaps may provide some breakthroughs. This paper will trace the development of baseline performance measurement techniques from human factors task loading studies to those of brain wave and physiological state measurements and offer several recommendations for further study.


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