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Effects of Information Availability on Command-and-Control Decision Making: Performance, Trust, and Situation Awareness.

Authors :
Marusich, Laura R.
Bakdash, Jonathan Z.
Onal, Emrah
Yu, Michael S.
Schaffer, James
O’Donovan, John
Höllerer, Tobias
Buchler, Norbou
Gonzalez, Cleotilde
O'Donovan, John
Source :
Human Factors. Mar2016, Vol. 58 Issue 2, p301-321. 21p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

<bold>Objective: </bold>We investigated how increases in task-relevant information affect human decision-making performance, situation awareness (SA), and trust in a simulated command-and-control (C2) environment.<bold>Background: </bold>Increased information is often associated with an improvement of SA and decision-making performance in networked organizations. However, previous research suggests that increasing information without considering the task relevance and the presentation can impair performance.<bold>Method: </bold>We used a simulated C2 task across two experiments. Experiment 1 varied the information volume provided to individual participants and measured the speed and accuracy of decision making for task performance. Experiment 2 varied information volume and information reliability provided to two participants acting in different roles and assessed decision-making performance, SA, and trust between the paired participants.<bold>Results: </bold>In both experiments, increased task-relevant information volume did not improve task performance. In Experiment 2, increased task-relevant information volume reduced self-reported SA and trust, and incorrect source reliability information led to poorer task performance and SA.<bold>Conclusion: </bold>These results indicate that increasing the volume of information, even when it is accurate and task relevant, is not necessarily beneficial to decision-making performance. Moreover, it may even be detrimental to SA and trust among team members.<bold>Application: </bold>Given the high volume of available and shared information and the safety-critical and time-sensitive nature of many decisions, these results have implications for training and system design in C2 domains. To avoid decrements to SA, interpersonal trust, and decision-making performance, information presentation within C2 systems must reflect human cognitive processing limits and capabilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00187208
Volume :
58
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Human Factors
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
113217010
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0018720815619515