Title :
Aircraft Control-Display Analysis and Design Using the Optimal Control Model of the Human Pilot
fDate :
7/1/1981 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The use of the optimal control model (OCM) of the human pilot as a design tool is discussed. A novel procedure for the assignment and selection of model parameters in the absence of experimental data is proposed. A technique for partitioning a weakly coupled, multiaxis task into approximate state-uncoupled, single-axis tasks is introduced. The resulting modeling technique is utilized in the design and analysis of an aircraft flight-director system. This flight-director design technique differs from previous related work using the OCM in that considerable effort is devoted to ensuring that the OCM-designed director exhibits the desirable frequency-domain characteristics associated with experimentally verified classical designs (e.g., K/s "effective vehicle" characteristics, noninteracting controls, etc.). The implications of the technique in the design of automatic flight control systems which employ the human pilot as a performance assessor and failure detector are briefly discussed.
Keywords :
Aerospace control; Aircraft navigation; Detectors; Frequency domain analysis; Humans; Open loop systems; Optimal control; Performance analysis; Signal to noise ratio; Vehicles;
Journal_Title :
Systems, Man and Cybernetics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TSMC.1981.4308724