• Title/Summary/Keyword: 자동화된 조종실

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A study on Pilot's Behavior in the Automated Cockpit (자동화된 조종실에서의 조종사 태도에 관한 연구)

  • Kwon, B.H.;Kim, C.Y.
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Aviation and Aeronautics
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    • v.13 no.2
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    • pp.1-13
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    • 2005
  • The objective of the study is to analyze the pilot's behavior such as preference and management technique to the automation of aircraft through Flight Management Attitude Questionnaire(FMAQ) survey. Participants in the survey are grouped in rank and nationality, and attitudes of those groups toward the automation are analyzed. Previous empirical studies have demonstrated large cross-nation differences in attitudes regarding task performance across several work domains including aviation. Analysis of the survey shows that the pilots in Asia region like the automation and its usage more than the pilots in western and Oceania regions. The trust in the automation is higher among glass cockpit pilots than among the conventional aircraft pilots. More foreign pilots than Korean pilots believe that the automation may deteriorate their flight skills. While more Korean pilots than foreign pilots agree that their flight skills can be kept by manual controls. The pilots also feel that the automated cockpits would require more verbal communications between crew members. For improving the automation management skills and the effective automation usage, the Situation Awareness training and Crew Resource Management(CRM) training are strongly suggested.

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Design and Evaluation of an Agent-based Intelligent System Modeling Architecture for Cockpit Agenda Management (항공시스템 아젠다 관리를 위한 에이젼트 모델의 설계 및 평가)

  • Cha, Woo-Chang
    • Journal of KIISE:Software and Applications
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    • v.27 no.6
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    • pp.642-650
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    • 2000
  • The pilot (human actor) involved in the control loop of the highly automated aircraft systems (machine actor) must be able to monitor these systems just as the machine actor must also be able to monitor the human actor. For its safety and better performance of the human machine system, each of the two elements must be knowledgeable about the other's intentions or goals. In fact, several recent accidents occurred due to goal conflicts between human and machines in a modern avionic system. To facilitate the coordination of these actors, a computational aid was developed. The aid, which operates in a part-task simulator environment, attempts to facilitate the management of the goals and functions being performed to accomplish them. To provide an accurate knowledge of both actors' goals and their function statuses, the aid uses agent-based objects representing the elements of the cockpit operations. This paper describes the development of the flightdeck goals and functions called Agenda Management.

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