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A Cognitive-System Model for En Route Air Traffic ManagementNASA Ames Research Center has been engaged in the development of advanced air traffic management technologies whose basic form is cognitive aiding systems for air traffic controller and flight deck operations. In the design and evaluation of such systems the dynamic interaction between the airborne aiding system and the ground-based aiding systems forms a critical coupling for control. The human operator is an integral control element in the system and the optimal integration of human decision and performance parameters with those of the automation aiding systems offers a significant challenge to cognitive engineering. This paper presents a study in full mission simulation and the development of a predictive computational model of human performance. We have found that this combination of methodologies provide a powerful design-aiding process. We have extended the computational model Man Machine Integrated Design and Analysis System (N13DAS) to include representation of multiple cognitive agents (both human operators and intelligent aiding systems), operating aircraft airline operations centers and air traffic control centers in the evolving airspace. The demands of this application require the representation of many intelligent agents sharing world-models, and coordinating action/intention with cooperative scheduling of goals and actions in a potentially unpredictable world of operations. The operator's activity structures have been developed to include prioritization and interruption of multiple parallel activities among multiple operators, to provide for anticipation (knowledge of the intention and action of remote operators), and to respond to failures of the system and other operators in the system in situation-specific paradigms. We have exercised this model in a multi-air traffic sector scenario with potential conflict among aircraft at and across sector boundaries. We have modeled the control situation as a multiple closed loop system. The inner and outer loop alerting structure of air traffic management has many implications that need to be investigated to assure adequate design. First, there are control and stability factors implicit in the design. As the inner loop response time approaches that of the outer loop, system stability may be compromised in that controllers may be solving a problem the nature of which has already been changed by pilot action. Second, information exchange and information presentation for both air and ground must be designed to complement as opposed to compete with each other. Third, the level of individual and shared awareness in trajectory modification and flight conformance needs to be defined. Fourth, the level of required awareness and performance impact of mixed fleet operations and failed-mode recovery must be explored.
Document ID
20020066662
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Corker, Kevin M.
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA United States)
Pisanich, Gregory
(Sterling Software, Inc. Moffett Field, CA United States)
Lebacqz, J. Victor
Date Acquired
August 20, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1998
Subject Category
Aircraft Communications And Navigation
Meeting Information
Meeting: 2nd International Engineering Psychology and Cognitive Ergonomics Conference
Location: Oxford
Country: United Kingdom
Start Date: October 28, 1998
End Date: November 1, 1998
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: RTOP 538-04-21
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.

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