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Effects of a target movement direction cue on head-tracking performance

Effects of a target movement direction cue on head-tracking performance
Effects of a target movement direction cue on head-tracking performance

A review of the literature has shown that most investigations of head-tracking performance have used symmetrically shaped targets. This paper identifies a problem in using circular targets to represent the movement of complex targets (i.e. targets giving directional cues). Two experiments investigated the effects of a target direction cue on head-tracking performance. In the first experiment, practice did not improve performance when tracking either with or without a 'look-ahead trace' showing all target positions 160 ms into the future. A second experiment utilized a 'look-ahead trace' showing target positions with eight different lead-times (0 - 560 ms). With lead-times of 160 ms or more, significant improvements in tracking performance and subjective difficulty ratings were obtained. Tracking responses were also significantly affected. The results suggest caution when performance data obtained with a symmetrical target are generalized to predict tracking performance with a real target giving cues to the direction of movement. The look-ahead trace offers a systematic means of bridging the gap between a symmetrical target and a real target having direction of movement cues.

head tracking, target cueing, helmet-mounted displays, predictive displays
1366-5847
360-376
So, Richard H.Y.
c0504602-a431-4e04-99b3-c5224ad51722
Griffin, Michael J.
24112494-9774-40cb-91b7-5b4afe3c41b8
So, Richard H.Y.
c0504602-a431-4e04-99b3-c5224ad51722
Griffin, Michael J.
24112494-9774-40cb-91b7-5b4afe3c41b8

So, Richard H.Y. and Griffin, Michael J. (2000) Effects of a target movement direction cue on head-tracking performance. Ergonomics, 43 (3), 360-376. (doi:10.1080/001401300184468).

Record type: Article

Abstract

A review of the literature has shown that most investigations of head-tracking performance have used symmetrically shaped targets. This paper identifies a problem in using circular targets to represent the movement of complex targets (i.e. targets giving directional cues). Two experiments investigated the effects of a target direction cue on head-tracking performance. In the first experiment, practice did not improve performance when tracking either with or without a 'look-ahead trace' showing all target positions 160 ms into the future. A second experiment utilized a 'look-ahead trace' showing target positions with eight different lead-times (0 - 560 ms). With lead-times of 160 ms or more, significant improvements in tracking performance and subjective difficulty ratings were obtained. Tracking responses were also significantly affected. The results suggest caution when performance data obtained with a symmetrical target are generalized to predict tracking performance with a real target giving cues to the direction of movement. The look-ahead trace offers a systematic means of bridging the gap between a symmetrical target and a real target having direction of movement cues.

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More information

Published date: 2000
Keywords: head tracking, target cueing, helmet-mounted displays, predictive displays
Organisations: Human Sciences Group

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 10473
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/10473
ISSN: 1366-5847
PURE UUID: a6b0ac4b-dfca-4f1d-bc77-138ed5d572ce
ORCID for Michael J. Griffin: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0743-9502

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 03 Jun 2005
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 04:59

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Contributors

Author: Richard H.Y. So
Author: Michael J. Griffin ORCID iD

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