Effects of Criteria on Flight Simulation: Study I. Heading Deviation Tolerance.

Abstract

Twenty-eight United States Air Force Academy cadets were trained in a GAT-1 flight simulator under one of four experimental groups. The groups were defined first by having heading information either provided by the normal heading indicator or by peripheral lights and second by their being trained on either a 5 deg. or a 10 deg heading deviation criterion. All cadets were subjected to four levels of a secondary cognitive task plus a control condition. There were no significant differences for either the main effect of heading indicator type of criterion level of training. The main effect of cognitive task difficulty level was significant for most measures. In addition, the heading indicator type by training criterion level interaction produced significant differences. Each significant interaction accounted for an average of 21% of the total variance. The study seems to indicate that training criteria are important independent variables in complex psychomotor/cognitive flight simulator tasks. (Author)

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jun 01, 1980
Accession Number
ADA088908

Entities

People

  • John M. Bermudez
  • Mark Nataupsky
  • Valentin W. Tirman

Organizations

  • Air Force Research Laboratory

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Air Force
  • Behavioral Sciences
  • Biomedical Research
  • Contracts
  • Flight Simulations
  • Flight Simulators
  • Government Procurement
  • Heading Indicators
  • Indicators
  • Information Processing
  • Psychology
  • Simulations
  • Simulators
  • Training
  • United States
  • United States Air Force Academy

Fields of Study

  • Education
  • Psychology

Readers

  • Aerospace Test and Evaluation
  • Instructional Design and Training Evaluation.
  • Regression Analysis.