Stress and Human Error - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 39
About This Presentation
Title:

Stress and Human Error

Description:

narrows attention to focus on info that is perceived as most task relevant ... Don't allow car windows to be raised with one touch of button ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:77
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 40
Provided by: hfac
Category:
Tags: error | human | stress

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Stress and Human Error


1
Stress and Human Error
  • chapter 12

2
Stress
  • A stressor is any thing which
  • is not an inherent characteristic of the
    human/machine system
  • is not inherent in the information to be
    processed
  • is (usually) expected to degrade system
    performance

3
Stressors
  • Environmental stressors may include noise,
    extreme temperature, vibration, poor light, drugs
    alcohol
  • Psychological stressors might include anxiety,
    frustration, fatigue, incentive

4
Stress
  • Stress may have effects on
  • phenomenology/affect (emotions)
  • physiology
  • sensory physical performance
  • For example, difficulty manipulating tools with
    cold hands
  • info processing/cognition
  • For example, difficulty concentrating, difficulty
    performing mental arithmetic

5
How does stress affect performance?
  • Yerkes-Dodson law
  • Some stress is good, too much is bad. Optimal
    level depends on task complexity.

Good
Easy Task
Performance
HardTask
Bad
Low
High
Stress
6
Specific effects of stress
  • Stress modulates arousal/alertness
  • arousal general energy level of operator
  • higher levels of arousal are generally better,
    i.e., lethargy does not produce good performance.

7
Effects of stress on attention
  • Stress narrows attentional selectivity
  • stress can increase attentional selectivity
  • narrows attention to focus on info that is
    perceived as most task relevant
  • under low stress, attention can be too
    non-selective
  • under high stress, attention can be too narrow
  • focusing errors
  • Stress is distracting
  • disrupts attention to relevant info tasks
  • selection errors

8
Specific effects of stress
  • Stress reduces working memory
  • can distract attention from verbal or spatial
    rehearsal
  • external noise can degrade info in a WM store
  • consequences are worse for complex tasks, which
    tend to rely more on WM
  • can prevent effective training and learning
  • training in a less-stressful simulated
    environment can enhance learning
  • Note that retrieval from long-term memory is
    spared!

9
Effects of stress Decision Making
  • Stress affects speed/accuracy of performance
  • can degrade perceptual-motor decision making
    performance
  • can encourage people to trade accuracy for speed
  • Stress can encourage use of different decision
    making strategies
  • may encourage shift away from slow, deliberative
    decision making toward faster more intuitive
    strategies
  • will make DMs more risk-averse
  • will degrade performance more for novices, whose
    rapid DM skills are poorer

10
Specific effects of stress
  • Stress produces response perseveration
  • encourages people to rely on familiar or
    recently-used actions.
  • People may continue to make the same response
    even though it has detrimental consequences.
  • discourages creative thinking, generation of new
    strategies or action plans (cognitive narrowing)

11
Effects of specific stressors
  • Intermittent Noise
  • effects are worse if bursts occur randomly
    instead of predictably
  • distracts observer from an ongoing task
  • distracts attention from rehearsal in WM
  • effects may last a short time or a relatively
    long time
  • For example, a short burst of noise interrupts
    manual tracking for 2-3 secs, interrupts visual
    scanning for as long as 30 secs
  • Example (visual noise)
  • Flash bulbs while speaking

12
Effects of specific stressors
  • Continuous Noise
  • encourages people to selectively attend to
    sources of info that they think are most relevant
  • affects attention to spatial non-spatial
    stimulus aspects
  • For example, noise increases detection rates for
    signals at central locations, decreases
    detections rates for signals in the periphery
    (attentional narrowing)
  • Also reduces the Stroop effect
  • Also encourages people to remember some aspects
    of stimuli better than others

13
Effects of specific stressors
  • Continuous Noise
  • reduces WM, degrading stored info distracting
    from rehearsal manipulation
  • For example, complex but not simple mental
    arithmetic is more difficult in a noisy
    environment
  • continues to degrade performance for 20-30
    minutes after noise is terminated, especially if
    people believe they have no control over the
    noise

14
Effects of specific stressors
  • Anxiety
  • narrows attention
  • For example, when led to believe that they were
    undergoing conditions of a 60 ft dive in a
    pressure chamber, a group of divers shifted
    attention away from peripheral signals in a
    dual-task study and focused on central signals
  • reduces WM
  • For example, inexperienced public speakers show
    WM loss shortly before making presentation in
    front of audience
  • can lead to perseveration
  • For example, when threatened with shock for
    failure, problem solvers tend to get stuck on an
    unsuccessful solution

15
Effects of specific stressors
  • Time Pressure
  • may encourage people to accelerate performance
    through inadequate info processing, omitted
    processing steps
  • speed accuracy tradeoffs are likely
  • For example, asked to decide which of two groups
    of numbers has a higher mean subjects under time
    pressure will base judgments on sum
  • 3, 8, 10 vs. 8, 10

16
Effects of specific stressors
  • Time Pressure
  • may encourage shift away from slow, deliberative
    decision making toward faster intuitive decision
    making
  • Although the faster method might not be as
    accurate, it is less affected by stress and might
    be more accurate than the deliberate methods in a
    stressful situation.

17
Effects of specific stressors
  • Time Pressure
  • because experienced DMs are more likely to be
    able to retrieve solutions from LTM, their
    performance is less affected by time pressure
  • For example, skilled pilots show better decision
    making than novices under time pressure, and are
    more likely to carry out their first retrieved
    solution
  • Similarly, experienced chess players are less
    degraded under time pressure than novices, and
    are more likely to generate a proper move
    immediately

18
How can operators cope with stress?
  • Remove the stressor.
  • Put up with it.
  • realise your weaknesses
  • Try harder.
  • may itself be stressful
  • may entail speed-accuracy tradeoff
  • Change goals/methods
  • change DM strategies
  • Use a simple heuristic rather than a detailed
    analysis

19
Remediating effects of stress
  • Design tasks displays to avoid exacerbating
    cognitive effects of stress
  • minimize WM demands
  • make relevant information attentionally salient
  • as much as possible, give operator control over
    stressor
  • Provide knowledge of control over stressors
  • make users aware of possible stressors and how
    they should cope
  • make users aware of when they can expect
    stressors to begin and end

20
Remediating effects of stress
  • Train for effective performance under stress
    ensure that skills are overlearned
  • responses become automatic
  • information can be retrieved from LTM
  • Design train for emergencies
  • be aware that overlearning of emergency skills
    will not happen during normal operations
  • That is, emergencies are rare during normal ops.
  • make emergency procedures as consistent as
    possible with normal procedures

21
Human Error
  • Human error is an important topic for study
    because
  • provides knowledge of form and causes of error
  • errors are consequential
  • For example, a study by the Institute of Medicine
    estimated that medical errors kill 44,000 or more
    patients annually. A newer study found that
    medication errors occurred on 5.7 of all orders
    in a pair of childrens hospitals

22
Errors from Engineering Psychologists View
  • Some errors are inevitable
  • In SDT, perfect detection/discrimination is rare
    because of in Signal Noise curves often overlap
  • Perfect decision making is impossible in a
    probabilistic environment.
  • e.g. given x, 90 of the time y happens, but
    sometimes z happens instead
  • Time stress often precludes optimal human
    performancefor firefighters, soldiers, police,
    E.R. doctors, etc., a mediocre choice in time is
    better than an optimal choice too late (Klein,
    1996)

23
Errors from Engineering Psychologists View
  • Some errors are only errors in hindsight
  • Errors can be the result of a long chain of very
    unlikely events.
  • Hindsight bias (belief that I knew it all
    along!) makes cause of errors look obvious in
    retrospect.
  • Second guessing is easier than actually
    predicting errors.

24
Classifying Errors
  • Mistakes intended behavior is inappropriate
    under the circumstances
  • knowledge based mistakes result from poor
    information, poor situation awareness, etc.
  • For example, when the USS Vincennes shot down and
    Iranian airliner,
  • USN had been expecting hostility
  • Vincennes was being fired on by Iranian navy
  • airliner was not on commercial airline schedules
  • airliner was mistakenly identified as military
  • airliner was not responding to communications

25
Classifying Errors
  • Mistakes intended behavior is inappropriate
    under the circumstances
  • rule based mistakes result when info and
    situation awareness are good, but operator lacks
    experience/knowledge to choose correct action
  • For example, deciding to let a flight take off
    despite knowledge of potentially dangerous
    weather

26
Classifying Errors
  • Slips intended behavior is appropriate, but is
    not carried out correctly
  • Turning on the wrong burner
  • Grabbing the wrong bottle of medication
  • Hitting Save function instead of Save As
  • Audi unintended acceleration
  • are especially likely to occur when a familiar or
    automatic behavior must be inhibited
  • Writing the wrong year on a check
  • Putting car into drive when it should be in
    reverse

27
Classifying Errors
  • Lapses an intended action is forgotten, not
    carried out
  • Failing to push Timer button on VCR
  • Failing to put gas cap on after filling up
  • Failing to attach files to email

28
Classifying Errors
  • Mode Errors action is appropriate in one system
    mode, but is carried out in a different mode
  • typically results because correct mode is not
    reinstated when it should be
  • Failing to put car back into drive after backing
    up a little bit
  • Typing in Overwrite mode instead of Insert mode
  • Failing to put remote control into mode
    appropriate for device (TV, VCR, stereo)

29
Classifying Errors
  • Errors can be distinguished from violations.
  • Violations intentional choice to disobey rule or
    procedure, not meant to cause harm
  • Flying too close to another aircraft
  • Surfacing a submarine without doing full acoustic
    or visual search
  • Releasing bombs from fighter jet without
    permission
  • Setting yourself on fire because someone on MTV
    did it
  • can occur because of organizational emphasis on
    costs or productivity instead of safety
  • For example, failing to meet OSHA standards

30
Remediating Errors
  • Equipment design
  • avoid perceptual confusions, ensure that stimuli
    are easily discriminable
  • Ensure that medicine bottles are clearly labeled
  • Ensure that ports on computer are labeled,
    discriminable
  • Bad design USB ports
  • make consequences of actions visible to user so
    that slips can be detected
  • Display message onscreen to indicate if VCR is in
    Play, Record, FF,

31
Remediating Errors
  • lock-out inappropriate behaviors
  • Dont allow automatic transmission to be moved
    from park without the brake pedal depressed.
  • Dont allow car windows to be raised with one
    touch of button
  • Dont allow key to be removed from vehicle that
    isnt in park
  • Give warning before deleting files
  • give reminders
  • Ask user if file should be saved before program
    shuts down

32
Remediating Errors
  • avoid multi-mode systems, make mode easily
    visible
  • Make overwrite/insert cursors distinct
  • know that errors will occur build
    error-tolerant systems avoid systems where
    consequential actions are irreversible
  • Include undo functions in software

33
(No Transcript)
34
Human Reliability Analysis
  • Reliability probability of making an error
  • Serial vs. Redundant Systems
  • Serial systems
  • only as good as the weakest link
  • Redundant systems
  • only fails when all systems at a certain level
    fail
  • more robust than a serial system

35
Human Reliability Analysis
  • Serial System
  • only as strong as the weakest link.
  • probability of the system failing is the product
    of the probability of any part not failing.

.90
.81 probability of success
.90
36
Human Reliability Analysis
  • Redundant System
  • only fails when all systems at a certain level
    fail.
  • probability of the system failing is the product
    of the probability of the parts at one level
    failing.

.90
.99 probability of success
.90
37
Human Reliability Analysis
  • Theoretically, HRP could be used to successfully
    predict failure rates of a system
  • Would make it easier to chose between different
    designs.
  • Would spotlight weaknesses in the system.

38
Human Reliability Analysis
  • However, there are major problems
  • Lack of a database
  • the data for the frequency of cognitive errors is
    rather thin.
  • Error monitoring and non-independence
  • If Humans make an error
  • they may change their behavior.
  • Humans are complex
  • If they detect a weakness (dim display) they may
    change their strategies.
  • Humans take machine reliability into account
  • if the machine is not reliable, people will make
    adjustments.

39
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com