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Technical

Report

Uninhabited Military Vehicles (UMVs): Human Factors Issues in Augmenting the Force

RTO-TR-HFM-078

Uninhabited Military Vehicles (UMVs) are used to augment manned forces in dull, dirty, or dangerous tasks. Human factors issues range from control station design, to vehicle interoperability, and integration with manned systems. New principles are reviewed for supporting the operator, and for collaboration between multiple operators. Future study is needed on techniques for distributive collaboration, command and control of UMV teams, and enabling flexible human supervisory control of multiple, highly-automated UMV assets.

Published7/30/2007
STOAuthorExternalMultiple
STOPublicationTypeTechnical Report RDP
Publication_ReferenceRTO-TR-HFM-078
DOI10.14339/RTO-TR-HFM-078
ISBNISBN 978-92-837-0060-9
STOPublisherRTO
AccessOpen Access
STOKeywordsadaptive interfaces; adaptive systems; autonomous operation; cognitive cooperation; control equipment; distributive collaboration; flexible levels of automation; human factors engineering; integrated systems; intelligent support; intelligent systems; interoperability; multi-modal interfaces; operational effectiveness; shared situation awareness; situational awareness; supervisory control; systems engineering; umv (uninhabited military vehicle); unmanned vehicles; virtual team performance

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