Signal salience was manipulated using configural and object displays to examine their effects on the performance, workload, and stress of vigilance. Improving performance and reducing the workload and stress of vigilance are crucial concerns. Signal salience improves performance and reduces stress, but to date there have been no salience manipulations using configural displays in a vigilance task. Two task types (individual variable monitoring and midpoint identification) and 3 display formats (bar graph-different baselines, bar graph-common baseline, and a polygon graph display) were examined. Configural displays improved performance in the midpoint identification task but not in the individual variable monitoring task. Workload depended o...
The "lnverted-U Hypothesis " states that for a given task, there is an optimal level of wo...
The National Research Council (Huey & Wickens, 1993) has identified transitions in task demand a...
The National Research Council (Huey & Wickens, 1993) has identified transitions in task demand as an...
Signal salience was manipulated using configural and object displays to examine their effects on the...
The workload and stress associated with configural displays in two vigilance tasks were investigated...
The present study investigated the effects of task type (cognitive vs. sensory) and source complexit...
A n experiment wasperformed to assess the effects of visual display mode and 6 hr monitoring on perf...
The present study tests an extension of the Dynamic Adaptability Theory of Stress (Hancock & Warm, 1...
The workload and stress associated with a 40-min vigilance task were examined under conditions where...
incorporated individual differences into the model (Szalma, 2008). The purpose was to investigate ho...
The workload and stress associated with a 40-min vigilance task were examined under conditions where...
This study examines the effects of stress on the processing of displayed information from two types ...
Sixty-one participants performed a sustained attention task in which they were required to respond t...
The purpose for the present study was to examine how person and task characteristics affected the pe...
The present study examined the Maximal Adaptability Model of Stress (Hancock & Wann, 1989) by invest...
The "lnverted-U Hypothesis " states that for a given task, there is an optimal level of wo...
The National Research Council (Huey & Wickens, 1993) has identified transitions in task demand a...
The National Research Council (Huey & Wickens, 1993) has identified transitions in task demand as an...
Signal salience was manipulated using configural and object displays to examine their effects on the...
The workload and stress associated with configural displays in two vigilance tasks were investigated...
The present study investigated the effects of task type (cognitive vs. sensory) and source complexit...
A n experiment wasperformed to assess the effects of visual display mode and 6 hr monitoring on perf...
The present study tests an extension of the Dynamic Adaptability Theory of Stress (Hancock & Warm, 1...
The workload and stress associated with a 40-min vigilance task were examined under conditions where...
incorporated individual differences into the model (Szalma, 2008). The purpose was to investigate ho...
The workload and stress associated with a 40-min vigilance task were examined under conditions where...
This study examines the effects of stress on the processing of displayed information from two types ...
Sixty-one participants performed a sustained attention task in which they were required to respond t...
The purpose for the present study was to examine how person and task characteristics affected the pe...
The present study examined the Maximal Adaptability Model of Stress (Hancock & Wann, 1989) by invest...
The "lnverted-U Hypothesis " states that for a given task, there is an optimal level of wo...
The National Research Council (Huey & Wickens, 1993) has identified transitions in task demand a...
The National Research Council (Huey & Wickens, 1993) has identified transitions in task demand as an...