Attention and automation: new perspectives on mental underload and performance
Attention and automation: new perspectives on mental underload and performance
There is considerable evidence in the ergonomics literature that automation can significantly reduce operator mental workload. Furthermore, reducing mental workload is not necessarily a good thing, particularly in cases where the level is already manageable. This raises the issue of mental underload, which can be at least as detrimental to performance as overload. However, although it is widely recognized that mental underload is detrimental to performance, there are very few attempts to explain why this may be the case.
It is argued in this paper that, until the need for a human operator is completely eliminated, automation has psychological implications relevant in both theoretical and applied domains. The present paper reviews theories of attention, as well as the literature on mental workload and automation, to synthesize a new explanation for the effects of mental underload on performance. Malleable attentional resources theory proposes that attentional capacity shrinks to accommodate reductions in mental workload, and that this shrinkage is responsible for the underload effect. The theory is discussed with respect to the applied implications for ergonomics research.
178-194
Young, Mark S.
3f79589e-2000-4cb0-832a-6eba54f50130
Stanton, Neville A.
771f9764-27d3-4a71-b8cc-909d600ab19b
1 April 2002
Young, Mark S.
3f79589e-2000-4cb0-832a-6eba54f50130
Stanton, Neville A.
771f9764-27d3-4a71-b8cc-909d600ab19b
Young, Mark S. and Stanton, Neville A.
(2002)
Attention and automation: new perspectives on mental underload and performance.
Theoretical Issues in Ergonomics Science, 3 (2), .
(doi:10.1080/14639220210123789).
Abstract
There is considerable evidence in the ergonomics literature that automation can significantly reduce operator mental workload. Furthermore, reducing mental workload is not necessarily a good thing, particularly in cases where the level is already manageable. This raises the issue of mental underload, which can be at least as detrimental to performance as overload. However, although it is widely recognized that mental underload is detrimental to performance, there are very few attempts to explain why this may be the case.
It is argued in this paper that, until the need for a human operator is completely eliminated, automation has psychological implications relevant in both theoretical and applied domains. The present paper reviews theories of attention, as well as the literature on mental workload and automation, to synthesize a new explanation for the effects of mental underload on performance. Malleable attentional resources theory proposes that attentional capacity shrinks to accommodate reductions in mental workload, and that this shrinkage is responsible for the underload effect. The theory is discussed with respect to the applied implications for ergonomics research.
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Published date: 1 April 2002
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Local EPrints ID: 76070
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/76070
ISSN: 1464-536X
PURE UUID: abc368e5-7419-401d-b228-a91eafcbab58
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Date deposited: 11 Mar 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 03:27
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Author:
Mark S. Young
Author:
Neville A. Stanton
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