V
Victor Riley
Researcher at Honeywell
Publications - 18
Citations - 6075
Victor Riley is an academic researcher from Honeywell. The author has contributed to research in topics: Avionics & Hazard (logic). The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 18 publications receiving 5614 citations.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Humans and Automation: Use, Misuse, Disuse, Abuse
Raja Parasuraman,Victor Riley +1 more
TL;DR: Understanding the factors associated with each of these aspects of human use of automation can lead to improved system design, effective training methods, and judicious policies and procedures involving automation use.
Journal Article
Humans and automation: Use, misuse, disuse, abuse
Raja Parasuraman,Victor Riley +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors address theoretical, empirical, and analytical studies pertaining to human use, misuse, disuse, and abuse of automation technology, and propose a method to detect false alarms and omissions.
Patent
System and method for automated monitoring, recognizing, supporting, and responding to the behavior of an actor
Christopher A. Miller,Wende L. Dewing,Karen Zita Haigh,David Toms,Rand P. Whillock,Christopher W. Geib,Stephen V. Metz,Rose Mae M. Richardson,Stephen Whitlow,John A. Allen,Lawrence King,John Phelps,Victor Riley,Peggy Wu +13 more
TL;DR: In this paper, an automated system and method for monitoring and supporting and actor in an environment, such as a daily living environment, is presented, where the system includes at least one sensor, one effector and a controller adapted to provide monitoring, situation assessment, response planning, and plan execution functions.
Patent
Interfaces for planning vehicle routes
TL;DR: In this article, a system for producing vehicle routes such as aircraft flight plans in the presence of weather and other hazards defines static and moving hazards with polygons drawn on a display containing graphic hazard regions.
Operator Reliance on Automation: Theory and Data
TL;DR: In this paper, Lerch and Prietula examined how attributions of qualities to agents affected operator trust in the agent, and found that the operator's decision to rely on automation may not depend only on the level of trust in a system, but rather on a more complex relationship among trust, self-confidence, and a number of other factors.