ISAE-SUPAERO, Neuroergonomics and Human Factors Research Group, DCAS, Toulouse University, France.
DTIS, ONERA, FR-13661 Salon cedex Air - France.
Appl Ergon. 2023 Nov;113:104082. doi: 10.1016/j.apergo.2023.104082. Epub 2023 Jul 5.
In high-risk environments, fast and accurate responses to warning systems are essential to efficiently handle emergency situations. The aim of the present study was twofold: 1) investigating whether hand action videos (i.e., gesture alarms) trigger faster and more accurate responses than text alarm messages (i.e., written alarms), especially when mental workload (MWL) is high; and 2) investigating the brain activity in response to both types of alarms as a function of MWL. Regardless of MWL, participants (N = 28) were found to be both faster and more accurate when responding to gesture alarms than to written alarms. Brain electrophysiological results suggest that this greater efficiency might be due to a facilitation of the action execution, reflected by the decrease in mu and beta power observed around the response time window observed at C3 and C4 electrodes. These results suggest that gesture alarms may improve operators' performances in emergency situations.
在高风险环境中,对警报系统做出快速、准确的响应对于高效处理紧急情况至关重要。本研究旨在达到两个目的:1)探究手势动作视频(即手势警报)是否比文本警报消息(即书面警报)引发更快、更准确的响应,尤其是在精神工作负荷(MWL)较高时;2)探究针对这两种警报的大脑活动作为 MWL 的函数。无论 MWL 如何,与书面警报相比,参与者(N=28)在响应手势警报时都更快、更准确。脑电生理结果表明,这种更高的效率可能是由于行动执行的促进所致,这反映在 C3 和 C4 电极观察到的响应时间窗口周围观察到的 mu 和 beta 功率降低。这些结果表明,手势警报可能会提高操作人员在紧急情况下的表现。