Paper
22 May 1995 Effect of arc segmented attitude reference symbology on a helmet-mounted display during an unusual attitude recovery task
Carita A. DeVilbiss, Walter E. Sipes
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
In an effort to address some of the fundamental issues that must be considered in any long- range progression from `targeting' to `flight instrument' for any helmet-mounted display (HMD), this study investigated the impact of incorporating an HMD with one of the objective flight performance tasks used in head-up display (HUD) evaluation. The task, an unusual attitude recovery, was adapted to require head movement by having the pilot acquire a target either on- or off-axis prior to initiating a recovery. Experiment One did not include any HMD orientation symbology and established the increase in reaction time 0.82 seconds for the on- axis condition to 1.35 seconds for the extreme off-axis condition (+/- 90 degrees off-axis with a +30 degree head tilt). Experiment Two included minimal HMD orientation information in half of the trials. In trials where no HMD symbology was presented, initial reaction times significantly increased (i.e., from 1.06 for on-axis to 1.56 seconds for +/- 80 degrees). In trials where pilots were provided minimal HMD orientation information off-axis, initial reaction times did not significantly increase (i.e., 1.06 on-axis to 1.12 seconds for +/- 80 degrees).
© (1995) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Carita A. DeVilbiss and Walter E. Sipes "Effect of arc segmented attitude reference symbology on a helmet-mounted display during an unusual attitude recovery task", Proc. SPIE 2465, Helmet- and Head-Mounted Displays and Symbology Design Requirements II, (22 May 1995); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.209744
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Cited by 6 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Head-mounted displays

Heads up displays

Head

Nose

Visualization

Eye

CRTs

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