Eye Tracking Metrics for Workload Estimation in Flight Deck OperationFlight decks of the future are being enhanced through improved avionics that adapt to both aircraft and operator state. Eye tracking allows for non-invasive analysis of pilot eye movements, from which a set of metrics can be derived to effectively and reliably characterize workload. This research identifies eye tracking metrics that correlate to aircraft automation conditions, and identifies the correlation of pilot workload to the same automation conditions. Saccade length was used as an indirect index of pilot workload: Pilots in the fully automated condition were observed to have on average, larger saccadic movements in contrast to the guidance and manual flight conditions. The data set itself also provides a general model of human eye movement behavior and so ostensibly visual attention distribution in the cockpit for approach to land tasks with various levels of automation, by means of the same metrics used for workload algorithm development.
Document ID
20100012851
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Ellis, Kyle (Iowa Univ. IA, United States)
Schnell, Thomas (Iowa Univ. IA, United States)
Date Acquired
August 24, 2013
Publication Date
March 1, 2010
Publication Information
Publication: Selected Papers Presented at MODSIM World 2009 Conference and Expo
IDRelationTitle20100012837Collected WorksSelected Papers Presented at MODSIM World 2009 Conference and Expo20100012837Collected WorksSelected Papers Presented at MODSIM World 2009 Conference and Expo