| Transitioning Resolution Responsibility between the Controller and Automation Team in Simulated NextGen Separation Assurance  (2013) As  part  of  an  ongoing  research  effort  on  separation assurance  and  functional  allocation  in  NextGen,  a controller-in-the-loop study with ground-based automation was conducted at NASA Ames Airspace Operations Laboratory in  August  2012  to  investigate  the  potential  impact  of introducing  self-separating  aircraft  in  progressively  advanced NextGen time-frames. From this larger study, the current exploratory analysis of controller-automation interaction styles focuses  on  the  last  and  most  far-term  time  frame.  Measurements were  recorded  that  firstly  verified  the  continued operational  validity  of  this  iteration  of  the  ground-based functional  allocation  automation  concept  in  forecast  traffic densities up to 2x that of current day high altitude en-route sectors. Additionally, with greater levels of fully automated conflict detection and resolution as well as the introduction of intervention functionality, objective and subjective analyses showed a  range of passive  to active  controller-automation  interaction styles  between  the  participants.  Not  only did  the controllers work with the automation to meet their safety and capacity goals in the simulated future NextGen timeframe, they did  so in  different  ways  and  with  different  attitudes  of trust/use of the automation.  Taken  as  a  whole,  the results showed that the prototyped controller-automation functional allocation framework was very flexible and successful overall. Assurance, Automation, between, Controller, NextGen, Resolution, Responsibility, Separation, Simulated, Team, Transitioning Proceedings of the Electronic Navigation Research Institute International Workshop on ATM/CNS (EIWAC 2013), Tokyo, Japan |