Publication | Closed Access
Predicting Controller Capacity in Supervisory Control of Multiple UAVs
129
Citations
18
References
2008
Year
Controller CapacityEngineeringAerial RoboticsAerospace EngineeringOperator CapacitySingle OperatorAutomationUnmanned SystemIndependent Uav SimulationSystems EngineeringComputer ScienceUnmanned VehicleAir Traffic ManagementUnmanned Aerial SystemsAir Vehicle SystemUnmanned Aerial Vehicles
In the future vision of allowing a single operator to remotely control multiple unmanned vehicles, it is not well understood what cognitive constraints limit the number of vehicles and related tasks that a single operator can manage. This paper illustrates that, when predicting the number of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) that a single operator can control, it is important to model the sources of wait times (WTs) caused by human-vehicle interaction, particularly since these times could potentially lead to a system failure. Specifically, these sources of vehicle WTs include cognitive reorientation and interaction WT (WTI), queues for multiple-vehicle interactions, and loss of situation awareness (SA) WTs. When WTs were included, predictions using a multiple homogeneous and independent UAV simulation dropped by up to 67%, with a loss of SA as the primary source of WT delays. Moreover, this paper demonstrated that even in a highly automated management-by-exception system, which should alleviate queuing and WTIs, operator capacity is still affected by the SA WT, causing a 36% decrease over the capacity model with no WT included.
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