Model-based approaches to human-automation systems design
Paper in proceeding, 2012

Human-automation interaction in complex systems is common, yet design for this interaction is often conducted without explicit consideration of the role of the human operator. Fortunately, there are a number of modeling frameworks proposed for supporting this design activity. However, the frameworks are often adapted from other purposes, usually applied to a limited range of problems, sometimes not fully described in the open literature, and rarely critically reviewed in a manner acceptable to proponents and critics alike. The present paper introduces a panel session wherein these proponents (and reportedly one or two critics) can engage one another on several agreed questions about such frameworks. The goal is to aid non-aligned practitioners in choosing between alternative frameworks for their human-automation interaction design challenges.

Human-automation interaction

Human factors engineering

Cognitive systems engineering

Control rooms

Automation

Cognitive engineering

Author

Greg A. Jamieson

University of Toronto

Jonas Andersson

Chalmers, Product and Production Development, Design and Human Factors

Ann Bisantz

SUNY Buffalo

Asaf Degani

General Motors

Morten Lind

Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

2012 Proceedings of the ASME 11th Biennial Conference on Engineering Systems Design and Analysis (ESDA2012)

Vol. 2 871-880
978-0-7918-4485-4 (ISBN)

Areas of Advance

Information and Communication Technology

Production

Energy

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Innovation and entrepreneurship

Subject Categories

Human Computer Interaction

Robotics

DOI

10.1115/ESDA2012-82892

ISBN

978-0-7918-4485-4

More information

Latest update

12/29/2020