Dissertation Defense: Revisiting the Vigilance Taxonomy: Are Findings Consistent in a Remote Environment?

Wednesday, November 8, 2023 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.

Announcing the Final Examination of Grace Waldfogle for the Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Psychology – Human Factors and Cognitive Psychology

Previous research has highlighted key taxonomic factors that have been found to influence human performance on vigilance tasks. However, previous literature has focused on research conducted in laboratory settings but has not examined vigilance tasks in remote environments. The present dissertation addresses this gap in the literature by examining human performance on a remote vigilance task, as well as workload and stress associated with the task. Qualitative data were collected to further understand the environment and distractions that participants experienced. Across three experiments, 372 participants were asked to complete a vigilance task and answer surveys pertaining to stress, workload, and ambient distractions. Experiment one manipulated the taxonomic factors of event rate and signal discrimination. Next, experiment two manipulated the taxonomic factors of event rate and source complexity. Finally, experiment three manipulated the taxonomic factors of event rate and task type. Across all three experiments, results identified significant differences in performance for the low and high event rate conditions, which are consistent with previous findings. Furthermore, signal discrimination type, source complexity, and task type (i.e., sensory vs. cognitive) resulted in significant differences between groups on measures of performance. All three experiments reported changes in perceived stress, and increases in perceived workload. Ambient distractions, when they occurred, did impact performance, but only for experiment two. Overall, this study provides further support for several facets of the vigilance taxonomy and attempts to understand the impact of remote environments and ambient distractions on vigilance performance. Thus, these findings are advancing our understanding of the vigilance taxonomy and how environmental effects may influence human performance.

 

Committee in Charge

Committee Chair: Dr. James Szalma

Department Committee Member: Dr. Mustapha Mouloua

Department Committee Member: Dr. Janan Smither

Outside Committee Member: Dr. Heather Lum

Read More

Location:


Contact:

College of Graduate Studies 407-823-2766 editor@ucf.edu

Calendar:

Graduate Thesis and Dissertation

Category:

Uncategorized/Other

Tags:

psychology defense Dissertation