| Literature DB >> 35556185 |
Colleen E Patton1, Christopher D Wickens2, Benjamin A Clegg2, Kayla M Noble2, C A P Smith2.
Abstract
Previous research suggests people struggle to detect a series of movements that might imply hostile intentions of a vessel, yet this ability is crucial in many real world Naval scenarios. To investigate possible mechanisms for improving performance, participants engaged in a simple, simulated ship movement task. One of two hostile behaviors were present in one of the vessels: Shadowing-mirroring the participant's vessel's movements; and Hunting-closing in on the participant's vessel. In the first experiment, history trails, showing the previous nine positions of each ship connected by a line, were introduced as a potential diagnostic aid. In a second experiment, the number of computer-controlled ships on the screen also varied. Smaller set size improved detection performance. History trails also consistently improved detection performance for both behaviors, although still falling well short of optimal, even with the smaller set size. These findings suggest that working memory plays a critical role in performance on this dynamic decision making task, and the constraints of working memory capacity can be decreased through a simple visual aid and an overall reduction in the number of objects being tracked. The implications for the detection of hostile intentions are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Intent perception; Uncertainty; Visual attention; Visual search
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35556185 PMCID: PMC9098711 DOI: 10.1186/s41235-022-00395-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Res Princ Implic ISSN: 2365-7464
Fig. 1Screen exhibiting the experimental paradigm. Participants controlled the green cross while the white circles represent computer controlled ships. Green and white lines are history trails indicating the past position of each ship
Fig. 2Percentage of correct detections by behavior with and without history trails. Error bars represent one standard error
Fig. 3Detection accuracy as a function of behavior and starting distance between the usership and hostile ship, divided into quartiles. Error bars represent one standard error
Fig. 4Detection accuracy above chance as a function of set size, history trails and behavior. Error bars represent one standard error
Fig. 5Detection accuracy for each set size as a function of the starting distance between the usership and hostile ship. Error bars represent one standard error
Fig. 6Joint effects of distance and behavior type on detection accuracy. Error bars represent one standard error