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Multimodal Pilot Behavior in Multi-Axis Tracking Tasks with Time-Varying Motion Cueing Gains
Author(s) -
Peter Zaal,
Daan M. Pool
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
aiaa modeling and simulation technologies conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2014-0810
Subject(s) - motion (physics) , computer science , control theory (sociology) , tracking (education) , filter (signal processing) , task (project management) , base (topology) , motion control , adaptation (eye) , simulation , computer vision , control (management) , artificial intelligence , engineering , mathematics , physics , psychology , pedagogy , mathematical analysis , systems engineering , optics , robot
In a large number of motion-base simulators, adaptive motion filters are utilized to maximize the use of the available motion envelope of the motion system. However, not much is known about how the time-varying characteristics of such adaptive filters affect pilots when performing manual aircraft control. This paper presents the results of a study investigating the effects of time-varying motion filter gains on pilot control behavior and performance. An experiment was performed in a motion-base simulator where participants performed a simultaneous roll and pitch tracking task, while the roll and/or pitch motion filter gains changed over time. Results indicate that performance increases over time with increasing motion gains. This increase is a result of a time-varying adaptation of pilots' equalization dynamics, characterized by increased visual and motion response gains and decreased visual lead time constants. Opposite trends are found for decreasing motion filter gains. Even though the trends in both controlled axes are found to be largely the same, effects are less significant in roll. In addition, results indicate minor cross-coupling effects between pitch and roll, where a cueing variation in one axis affects the behavior adopted in the other axis.

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