The Effect of Motion Relationship and Rate of Pointer Movement on Tracking Performance


Book Description

"This report describes an experiment in which the subjects, using an aircraft-type stick control, attempted to keep the pointers on a simulated cross-pointer display on center in spite of random disturbances. Both the difficulty of the problem, expressed in terms of rate of pointer motion, and the motion relationship between control and display were varied. The effects on performance of these variations, singly and in combination, were assessed. The results indicate that: (a) tracking performance improves as the rate of movement of the pointers decrease; (b) the motion relationship is superior to its converse; (c) no significant interaction effects result from combinations of rates of pointer movement and direction of motion relationship; (d) practice extending over 140 trials, each of 50 seconds duration, was not sufficient to nullify the effects of an adverse motion relationship or of higher rates of pointer motion."--Abstract.







WADC Technical Report


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Stimulus-Response Compatibility Principles


Book Description

Understanding of the factors that influence stimulus-response (S-R) compatibility and determine when and how compatibility effects will arise is a necessary foundation for appropriately applying compatibility principles in design and for evaluating the relative compatibility of alternative designs. Summarizing the state of contemporary knowledge re










The Arrangement of Instruments, the Distance Between Instruments, and the Position of Instrument Pointers as Determinants of Performance in an Eye-hand Coordination Task


Book Description

Three experiments are reported In which the effects of various visual stimulus patterns formed by different arrangements of instruments and pointers ere studied. For the task employed, which as a continuous, dual-pursuit problem, the results of all three experiments are in agreement in indicating that subjects give significantly superior performance when instruments are close together, instruments are aligned horizontally, and pointers are aligned at 9 o'clock for horizontally separated instruments and at 12 o'clock for vertically-separated instruments, or else the pointers are counterpoised. The results of an extended learning study indicated that differences in the initial performance of individuals when using the different pointer-position patterns actually increased during fifteen daily practice sessions.