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      Automobilergonomie 

      Der Mensch als Fahrer

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          The magical number seven plus or minus two: some limits on our capacity for processing information.

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            Optic flow is used to control human walking.

            How is human locomotion visually controlled? Fifty years ago, it was proposed that we steer to a goal using optic flow, the pattern of motion at the eye that specifies the direction of locomotion. However, we might also simply walk in the perceived direction of a goal. These two hypotheses normally predict the same behavior, but we tested them in an immersive virtual environment by displacing the optic flow from the direction of walking, violating the laws of optics. We found that people walked in the visual direction of a lone target, but increasingly relied on optic flow as it was added to the display. The visual control law for steering toward a goal is a linear combination of these two variables weighted by the magnitude of flow, thereby allowing humans to have robust locomotor control under varying environmental conditions.
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              Vigilance requires hard mental work and is stressful.

              We describe major discoveries and developments in vigilance research. Vigilance tasks have typically been viewed as undemanding assignments requiring little mental effort. The vigilance decrement function has also been considered to result from a decline in arousal brought about by understimulation. Recent research in vigilance is reviewed in four areas: studies of task type, perceived mental workload during vigilance, neural measures of resource demand in vigilance, and studies of task-induced stress. Experiments comparing successive and simultaneous vigilance tasks support an attentional resource theory of vigilance. Subjective reports also show that the workload of vigilance is high and sensitive to factors that increase processing demands. Neuroimaging studies using transcranial Doppler sonography provide strong, independent evidence for resource changes linked to performance decrement in vigilance tasks. Finally, physiological and subjective reports confirm that vigilance tasks reduce task engagement and increase distress and that these changes rise with increased task difficulty. Converging evidence using behavioral, neural, and subjective measures shows that vigilance requires hard mental work and is stressful. This research applies to most human-machine systems that require human monitoring, particularly those involving automated subsystems.
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                Author and book information

                Book Chapter
                2015
                February 24 2015
                : 67-162
                10.1007/978-3-8348-2297-0_3
                9b16092d-e4c4-479b-8427-45fe28ce0196
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