Conference proceeding
Quality of Training Effectiveness Assessment (QTEA); A neurophysiologically based method to enhance flight training
2008 IEEE/AIAA 27th Digital Avionics Systems Conference, pp.4.D.6-1-4.D.6-13
10/2008
DOI: 10.1109/DASC.2008.4702840
Abstract
Today, flight trainers use objective measures of task performance and additional estimated, subjective data to assess the cognitive workload and situation awareness of trainees. This data is very useful in training assessment but trainees can succeed at performing a task purely by accident (referred to as ldquomiserable successrdquo). Additionally the trainee can be in a less than optimal for learning cognitive state when the instructor operator applies brute force training tasks and methods with little regard to the learning curve which can result in the training being too easy or more often too difficult thereby inducing negative learning. In order to provide the instructor with additional quantitative data on student performance, we have designed the quality of training effectiveness assessment (QTEA) concept. QTEA is conceived as a system that allows the trainer to assess a student in real-time using sensors that can quantify the cognitive and physiological workload. Patterns of cognitive and physiological behavior can be established for experts to provide a learning benchmark towards which new trainees can be trained. Using QTEA, the trainer can quantify the studentpsilas workload level in real-time so that the scenarios can be adjusted to an optimal intensity. The cognitive and physiological measures also serve as a quantitative manifestation of a studentpsilas learning curve and it will be possible for the trainer to detect plateaus in learning. QTEA is under development but once fielded as an operational system, the trainer will be able to assess the needs for further training in a student. The basic idea of QTEA is to give the trainer a real-time picture of the performance of a trainee based on human physiological and cognitive data, flight technical, and mission specific data. In this paper, we are presenting the QTEA framework in the context of an ongoing project that studies trainee performance in a simulated Urban Close-Air Support Task.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Quality of Training Effectiveness Assessment (QTEA); A neurophysiologically based method to enhance flight training
- Creators
- Tom Schnell - Operator Performance Lab., Iowa City, IAMike Keller - Operator Performance Lab., Iowa City, IAPieter Poolman - Operator Performance Lab., Iowa City, IA
- Resource Type
- Conference proceeding
- Publication Details
- 2008 IEEE/AIAA 27th Digital Avionics Systems Conference, pp.4.D.6-1-4.D.6-13
- Publisher
- IEEE
- DOI
- 10.1109/DASC.2008.4702840
- ISSN
- 2155-7195
- eISSN
- 2155-7209
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 10/2008
- Academic Unit
- Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences; Occupational and Environmental Health; Electrical and Computer Engineering; Neurology; Industrial and Systems Engineering; Public Policy Center (Archive)
- Record Identifier
- 9984186972902771
Metrics
4 Record Views