Three experiments are described in which tracking difficulty is varied in the presence of a covert tone discrimination task. Event related brain potentials (ERPs) elicited by the tones are employed as an index of the resource demands of tracking. The ERP measure reflected the control order variation, and this variable was thereby assumed to compete for perceptual/central processing resources. A fine-grained analysis of the results suggested that the primary demands of second order tracking involve the central processing operations of maintaining a more complex internal model of the dynamic system, rather than the perceptual demands of higher derivative perception. Experiment 3 varied tracking bandwidth in random input tracking, and the ERP ...
While human subjects tracked a subset of ten identical, randomly-moving objects, event-related poten...
The processing demands of two tracking strategies are investigated using an op-timum-maximum procedu...
While human subjects tracked a subset of ten identical, randomly-moving objects, event-related poten...
Three experiments are described in which tracking difficulty is varied in the presence of a covert t...
The cognitive workload of a steering task could reflect its demand on attentional as well as working...
Current concerns in the assessment of mental workload are discussed, and the event-related brain pot...
Contains fulltext : 99320.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Performance-moni...
As an index of task workload, the possible advantages of the event-related brain potential (ERP) ove...
Subjects performed a visual tracking task while performing a concurrent task in which tones were cov...
The resources allocated to a primary and secondary task are reciprocal. Subjects performed a trackin...
This paper describes an investigation which assessed the feasibility of the event related brain pote...
As an index of task workload, the possible advantages of the event-related brain potential (ERP) ove...
The results of two studies which investigated the relationships between cognitive processing and com...
The advantages of employing the event-related brain potential (ERP) in the assessment of allocation ...
Performance-monitoring as a key function of cognitive control covers a wide range of diverse process...
While human subjects tracked a subset of ten identical, randomly-moving objects, event-related poten...
The processing demands of two tracking strategies are investigated using an op-timum-maximum procedu...
While human subjects tracked a subset of ten identical, randomly-moving objects, event-related poten...
Three experiments are described in which tracking difficulty is varied in the presence of a covert t...
The cognitive workload of a steering task could reflect its demand on attentional as well as working...
Current concerns in the assessment of mental workload are discussed, and the event-related brain pot...
Contains fulltext : 99320.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Performance-moni...
As an index of task workload, the possible advantages of the event-related brain potential (ERP) ove...
Subjects performed a visual tracking task while performing a concurrent task in which tones were cov...
The resources allocated to a primary and secondary task are reciprocal. Subjects performed a trackin...
This paper describes an investigation which assessed the feasibility of the event related brain pote...
As an index of task workload, the possible advantages of the event-related brain potential (ERP) ove...
The results of two studies which investigated the relationships between cognitive processing and com...
The advantages of employing the event-related brain potential (ERP) in the assessment of allocation ...
Performance-monitoring as a key function of cognitive control covers a wide range of diverse process...
While human subjects tracked a subset of ten identical, randomly-moving objects, event-related poten...
The processing demands of two tracking strategies are investigated using an op-timum-maximum procedu...
While human subjects tracked a subset of ten identical, randomly-moving objects, event-related poten...