DocumentCode :
3685354
Title :
Avionic technology testing by using a cognitive neurometric index: A study with professional helicopter pilots
Author :
Gianluca Borghini;Pietro Aricò;Gianluca Di Flumeri;Serenella Salinari;Alfredo Colosimo;Stefano Bonelli;Linda Napoletano;Ana Ferreira;Fabio Babiloni
Author_Institution :
Dept. Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Rome “
fYear :
2015
Firstpage :
6182
Lastpage :
6185
Abstract :
In this study, we investigated the possibility to evaluate the impact of different avionic technologies on the mental workload of helicopter´s pilots by measuring their brain activity with the EEG during a series of simulated missions carried out at AgustaWestland facilities in Yeovil (UK). The tested avionic technologies were: i) Head-Up Display (HUD); ii) Head-Mounted Display (HMD); iii) Full Conformal symbology (FC); iv) Flight Guidance (FG) symbology; v) Synthetic Vision System (SVS); and vi) Radar Obstacles (RO) detection system. It has been already demonstrated that in cognitive tasks, when the cerebral workload increases the EEG power spectral density (PSD) in theta band over frontal areas increases, and the EEG PSD in alpha band decreases over parietal areas. A mental workload index (MWL) has been here defined as the ratio between the frontal theta and parietal alpha EEG PSD values. Such index has been used for testing and comparing the different avionic technologies. Results suggested that the HUD provided a significant (p<;.05) workload reduction across all the flight scenarios with respect to the other technologies. In addition, the simultaneous use of FC and FG technologies (FC+FG) produced a significant decrement of the workload (p<;.01) with respect to the use of only the FC. Moreover, the use of the SVS technology provided on Head Down Display (HDD) with the simultaneous use of FC+FG and the RO seemed to produce a lower cerebral workload when compared with the use of only the FC. Interestingly, the workload estimation by means of subjective measures, provided by pilots through a NASA-TLX questionnaire, did not provide any significant differences among the different flight scenarios. These results suggested that the proposed MWL cognitive neurometrics could be used as a reliable measure of the user´s mental workload, being a valid indicator for the comparison and the test of different avionic technologies.
Keywords :
"Electroencephalography","Aerospace electronics","Indexes","Radar","Visualization","Testing","Brain"
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2015 37th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
ISSN :
1094-687X
Electronic_ISBN :
1558-4615
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2015.7319804
Filename :
7319804
Link To Document :
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