scholarly journals A break from pain! Interruption management in the context of pain

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-91
Author(s):  
Rena Gatzounis ◽  
Geert Crombez ◽  
Martien G S Schrooten ◽  
Johan W S Vlaeyen
Atmosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 341
Author(s):  
Carolina Rodriguez-Paras ◽  
Johnathan T. McKenzie ◽  
Pasakorn Choterungruengkorn ◽  
Thomas K. Ferris

Despite the increasing availability of technologies that provide access to aviation weather information in the cockpit, weather remains a prominent contributor to general aviation (GA) accidents. Pilots fail to detect the presence of new weather information, misinterpret it, or otherwise fail to act appropriately on it. When cognitive demands imposed by concurrent flight tasks are high, the risks increase for each of these failure modes. Previous research shows how introducing vibrotactile cues can help ease or redistribute some of these demands, but there is untapped potential in exploring how vibratory cues can facilitate “interruption management”, i.e., fitting the processing of available weather information into flight task workflow. In the current study, GA pilots flew a mountainous terrain scenario in a flight training device while receiving, processing, and acting on various weather information messages that were displayed visually, in graphical and text formats, on an experimental weather display. Half of the participants additionally received vibrotactile cues via a connected smartwatch with patterns that conveyed the “severity” of the message, allowing pilots to make informed decisions about when to fully attend to and process the message. Results indicate that weather messages were acknowledged more often and faster when accompanied by the vibrotactile cues, but the time after acknowledgment to fully process the messages was not significantly affected by vibrotactile cuing, nor was overall situation awareness. These findings illustrate that severity-encoded vibrotactile cues can support pilot awareness of updated weather as well as task management in processing weather messages while managing concurrent flight demands.


2022 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuan Zhao ◽  
Weihua Yu ◽  
Dingwei Guo ◽  
Xiaoping He

In light of China’s Carbon Neutrality Target and facing the fluctuating pressure of power supply brought on by new energy intermittent power generation, it is urgent to mobilize a large number of residential flexible loads that can respond instantaneously to mitigate peak–valley difference. Under a framework of demand-side management (DSM) and utility analysis, we empirically investigate customers’ costs from interrupting typical electrical terminals at the household level. Specifically, by using the contingent valuation method (CVM), we explore the factors that affect households’ Willingness to Accept (WTA) of voluntarily participating in the interruption management during the summer electricity peak and estimate the distribution of households’ WTA values. We find that given the value of WTA, households’ participation rate in the interruption management significantly decreases with the increase in interruption duration and varies with the type of terminal appliance that is on direct interruption management. Moreover, the majority of households are willing to participate in the interruption management even if the compensation amount is low. The factors that determine households’ WTA and the size of their influences vary with the type of electrical terminal. The results imply that differentiating the terminal electricity market and accurately locking on the target terminals by considering the household heterogeneity can reduce the household welfare losses arising from DSM.


Author(s):  
Shameem Hameed ◽  
Thomas Ferris ◽  
Swapnaa Jayaraman ◽  
Nadine Sarter

Author(s):  
Pamela J. Hopp ◽  
C. A. P. Smith ◽  
Benjamin A. Clegg ◽  
Eric D. Heggestad

Author(s):  
Tomoki Shibata ◽  
Alena Borisenko ◽  
Anzu Hakone ◽  
Tal August ◽  
Leonidas Deligiannidis ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Shreejana Prajapati ◽  
◽  
Koichi Yamada ◽  
Muneyuki Unehara ◽  
Izumi Suzuki

Spontaneous communication is an integral part of any workplace as well as everyday life. In workplaces that use computer or similar devices, most of the spontaneous conversations happen over email or chat. Frequent use of chat application or email disrupts a recipient’s workflow and leads to constant interruptions causing task fragmentation. In this paper, we present a receiver oriented Interruption-Information Management (IIM) chat which incorporates automated agents to prevent receivers from getting a plethora of messages. This framework manages both interruption and forthcoming information in the chat interface. It is a novel approach in the area of interruption management. It not only considers interruption management, but also manages the information based on the users’ behavior and preferences. It is a cooperative approach where both the message sender and the receiver work together to deliver messages during the receiver’s most favorable times. The receiver contributes to manage interruption whereas the sender contributes to manage information, together forming an interruption-information management mechanism to decide the least interruptible time for message delivery.


2010 ◽  
Vol 68 (5) ◽  
pp. 288-306 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sukeshini Grandhi ◽  
Quentin Jones

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