Application of Human-Autonomy Teaming (HAT) Patterns to Reduced Crew Operations (RCO) (2016)
Unmanned aerial systems, advanced cockpits, and air traffic management are all seeing dramatic increases in automation. However, while automation may take on some tasks previously performed by humans, humans will still be required to remain in the system for the foreseeable future. The collaboration between humans and these increasingly autonomous systems will begin to resemble cooperation between teammates, rather than simple task allocation. It is critical to understand this human-autonomy teaming (HAT) to optimize these systems in the future. One methodology to understand HAT is by identifying recurring patterns of HAT that have similar characteristics and solutions. This paper applies a methodology for identifying HAT patterns to an advanced cockpit project.
Crew, Design, HAT, Human-Autonomy, Operations, Patterns, RCO, Reduced, Teaming
InĀ International Conference on Engineering Psychology and Cognitive ErgonomicsĀ (pp. 244-255). Springer International Publishing
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