chapter 11: mental workload, stress and individual differences: cognitive and neuroergonomic...

22
Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

Upload: susanna-jefferson

Post on 18-Dec-2015

223 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and

Neuroergonomic Approaches

Slide Template

Page 2: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

THE NEUROERGONOMIC APPROACH

Page 3: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

MENTAL WORKLOAD

Page 4: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template
Page 5: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

Workload Overload

• Relative/absolute workload• Predictive models• Workload assessment

Page 6: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

Workload Overload

Page 7: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

Reserve Capacity Region

• Relative predictions

Page 8: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

Measures of Mental Workload and Reserve Capacity

• Behavioral measures• Secondary tasks• Subjective measures• Purpose of workload assessment

Page 9: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

Neuroergonomics of Workload

• Overview• EEG• Event-related potentials• Ultrasound measures of cerebral blood flow• Near infrared spectroscopy and cerebral

oxygenation

Page 10: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

Neuroergonomics of Workload

• Heart-rate variability• Pupil diameter• Visual scanning, entropy, and the “nearest

neighbor index”• Costs and benefits of physiological measures

of workload

Page 11: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

Relationship between Workload Measures

• Dissociation• Effort and the number of tasks

Page 12: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

Consequences of Workload

• Adaptation

Page 13: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

STRESS, PHYSIOLOGICAL AROUSAL, AND HUMAN PERFORMANCE

Page 14: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template
Page 15: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

The Yerkes Dodson Law

Page 16: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

• Arousal Theory• Transactional and Cognitive

Appraisal Theories of Stress• Stress Effects on Performance

Page 17: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

Stress Components Effects

• Selective attention: Narrowing• Selective attention :Distraction• Working memory loss• Preservation

Page 18: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

Stress Components Effects

• Strategic control– Recruitment of more resources– Remove the stressor– Change the goals of the task– Do nothing

Page 19: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template
Page 20: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

Stress Remediation

• Environmental solutions• Design solutions• Training

Page 21: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

Page 22: Chapter 11: Mental Workload, Stress and Individual Differences: Cognitive and Neuroergonomic Approaches Slide Template

• Ability Differences in Multitasking• Differences in Working Memory• Molecular Genetics and Individual

Differences in Cognition• Brain Computer Interfaces for

Healthy and Disabled Individuals