Peripheral Displays for Spatial Orientation in a Dual-task Environment
Abstract
Pilots' mental resources can be overburdened by the information presented in cockpit displays. Previous research found that presenting information in a 3D perspective, or virtual, head-up display (HUD) can lessen information overload. The current research examined whether extending virtual HUDs into the visual periphery will further reduce the mental workload associated with spatial orientation processes such as perception and control of the heading direction and speed of self-motion (egospeed). It found that: (a) heading control based on peripheral vision is equivalent to that based on central vision if informative areas of optical flow are visible; (b) control of heading requires only a limited amount of attentional resources; and (c) the complex motion created by transparently superimposing optical flow in a display can lead to systematic heading errors. Additional research found that perception and control of egospeed is based primarily on the mean image velocity of the display, but that texture density and motion parallax produce small but consistent biases. Further research found better flight-path and speed control performance with a peripherally-located virtual speed-error HUD as compared to the MIL-STD-1787B HUD airspeed indicator. Taken as a whole, these results suggest that peripheral virtual HUDs have significant potential for conveying spatial orientation with fewer resource demands than conventional HUDs.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jan 05, 2002
- Accession Number
- ADA402605
Entities
Organizations
- University of Idaho