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Journal ArticleDOI

Humans and Automation: Use, Misuse, Disuse, Abuse

Raja Parasuraman, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1997 - 
- Vol. 39, Iss: 2, pp 230-253
TLDR
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.
Abstract
This paper addresses theoretical, empirical, and analytical studies pertaining to human use, misuse, disuse, and abuse of automation technology. Use refers to the voluntary activation or disengagement of automation by human operators. Trust, mental workload, and risk can influence automation use, but interactions between factors and large individual differences make prediction of automation use difficult. Misuse refers to over reliance on automation, which can result in failures of monitoring or decision biases. Factors affecting the monitoring of automation include workload, automation reliability and consistency, and the saliency of automation state indicators. Disuse, or the neglect or underutilization of automation, is commonly caused by alarms that activate falsely. This often occurs because the base rate of the condition to be detected is not considered in setting the trade-off between false alarms and omissions. Automation abuse, or the automation of functions by designers and implementation by man...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A model for types and levels of human interaction with automation

TL;DR: A model for types and levels of automation is outlined that can be applied to four broad classes of functions: 1) information acquisition; 2) information analysis; 3) decision and action selection; and 4) action implementation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trust in Automation: Designing for Appropriate Reliance

TL;DR: This review considers trust from the organizational, sociological, interpersonal, psychological, and neurological perspectives, and considers how the context, automation characteristics, and cognitive processes affect the appropriateness of trust.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trust in Automation: Integrating Empirical Evidence on Factors That Influence Trust

TL;DR: A three-layered trust model provides a new lens for conceptualizing the variability of trust in automation and can be applied to help guide future research and develop training interventions and design procedures that encourage appropriate trust.
Journal ArticleDOI

A meta-analysis of factors affecting trust in human-robot interaction.

TL;DR: Factors related to the robot itself, specifically, its performance, had the greatest current association with trust, and environmental factors were moderately associated; there was little evidence for effects of human-related factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vigilance Requires Hard Mental Work and Is Stressful

TL;DR: Converging evidence using behavioral, neural, and subjective measures shows that vigilance requires hard mental work and is stressful.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Brief paper: Ironies of automation

TL;DR: The ways in which automation of industrial processes may expand rather than eliminate problems with the human operator are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enacted sensemaking in crisis situations[1]

TL;DR: This paper argued that commitment, capacity, and expectations affect sensemaking during crisis and the severity of the crisis itself, and proposed that the core concepts of enactment may comprise an ideology that reduces the likelihood of crisis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trust, control strategies and allocation of function in human-machine systems.

TL;DR: An experiment is reported to characterize the changes in operators' trust during an interaction with a semi-automatic pasteurization plant, and a regression model identifies the causes of changes in trust and a 'trust transfer function' is developed using time series analysis to describe the dynamics of trust.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trust, self-confidence, and operators' adaptation to automation

TL;DR: This paper examines the relationship between trust in automatic controllers, self-confidence in manual control abilities, and the use of automatic controllers in operating a simulated semi-automatic pasteurization plant and found trust, combined with self- confidence, predicted the operators' allocation strategy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Performance Consequences of Automation-Induced 'Complacency'

TL;DR: The effect of variations in the reliability of an automated monitoring system on human operator detection of automation failures was examined in two experiments, providing the first empirical evidence of the performance consequences of these changes.
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