Communication Strategies in Human-Autonomy Teams During Technological Failures.

Autor: Harrison JL; Georgia Institute of Technology, USA., Zhou S; Arizona State University, USA., Scalia MJ; Arizona State University, USA., Grimm DAP; Georgia Institute of Technology, USA., Demir M; Arizona State University, USA., McNeese NJ; Clemson University, USA., Cooke NJ; Arizona State University, USA., Gorman JC; Arizona State University, USA.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Human factors [Hum Factors] 2024 Nov; Vol. 66 (11), pp. 2539-2555. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jan 09.
DOI: 10.1177/00187208231222119
Abstrakt: Objective: This study examines low-, medium-, and high-performing Human-Autonomy Teams' (HATs') communication strategies during various technological failures that impact routine communication strategies to adapt to the task environment.
Background: Teams must adapt their communication strategies during dynamic tasks, where more successful teams make more substantial adaptations. Adaptations in communication strategies may explain how successful HATs overcome technological failures. Further, technological failures of variable severity may alter communication strategies of HATs at different performance levels in their attempts to overcome each failure.
Method: HATs in a Remotely Piloted Aircraft System-Synthetic Task Environment (RPAS-STE), involving three team members, were tasked with photographing targets. Each triad had two randomly assigned participants in navigator and photographer roles, teaming with an experimenter who simulated an AI pilot in a Wizard of Oz paradigm. Teams encountered two different technological failures, automation and autonomy, where autonomy failures were more challenging to overcome.
Results: High-performing HATs calibrated their communication strategy to the complexity of the different failures better than medium- and low-performing teams. Further, HATs adjusted their communication strategies over time. Finally, only the most severe failures required teams to increase the efficiency of their communication.
Conclusion: HAT effectiveness under degraded conditions depends on the type of communication strategies enacted by the team. Previous findings from studies of all-human teams apply here; however, novel results suggest information requests are particularly important to HAT success during failures.
Application: Understanding the communication strategies of HATs under degraded conditions can inform training protocols to help HATs overcome failures.
Databáze: MEDLINE