Examining the Impact of Increasing Location-Based Information Fidelity on Command Center Decision-Making

The deployment of high-fidelity information systems in command and control environments is common, however it is not yet well understood what impacts these systems have on decision-making processes, or whether the implementation of these systems is always a positive change. Research in military doma...

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Main Author: Cerar, Katherine
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/6284
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-62842013-10-04T04:11:21ZCerar, Katherine2011-09-28T19:53:02Z2011-09-28T19:53:02Z2011-09-28T19:53:02Z2011http://hdl.handle.net/10012/6284The deployment of high-fidelity information systems in command and control environments is common, however it is not yet well understood what impacts these systems have on decision-making processes, or whether the implementation of these systems is always a positive change. Research in military domains has suggested that these types of systems can create substantial increases in micromanagement, but these changes have not been empirically investigated. In this thesis, the effect of high-fidelity information on command environments is experimentally evaluated. A baseline set of data is collected within a real-world command center that uses only low-fidelity information. Then, a laboratory-based controlled technology experiment is used to gather information about how the command processes change as information fidelity is increased. Finally, the same system is implemented within the functioning command center and a preliminary comparison is carried out against the original baseline data. The experimental study suggests that an increase in micromanagement may occur with an increase in information fidelity, while increases in situation awareness and performance improvements during times of both extremely low and high workload are seen. The preliminary ecological validation study shows support for these effects.enExamining the Impact of Increasing Location-Based Information Fidelity on Command Center Decision-MakingThesis or DissertationSystems Design EngineeringMaster of Applied ScienceSystem Design Engineering
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic System Design Engineering
spellingShingle System Design Engineering
Cerar, Katherine
Examining the Impact of Increasing Location-Based Information Fidelity on Command Center Decision-Making
description The deployment of high-fidelity information systems in command and control environments is common, however it is not yet well understood what impacts these systems have on decision-making processes, or whether the implementation of these systems is always a positive change. Research in military domains has suggested that these types of systems can create substantial increases in micromanagement, but these changes have not been empirically investigated. In this thesis, the effect of high-fidelity information on command environments is experimentally evaluated. A baseline set of data is collected within a real-world command center that uses only low-fidelity information. Then, a laboratory-based controlled technology experiment is used to gather information about how the command processes change as information fidelity is increased. Finally, the same system is implemented within the functioning command center and a preliminary comparison is carried out against the original baseline data. The experimental study suggests that an increase in micromanagement may occur with an increase in information fidelity, while increases in situation awareness and performance improvements during times of both extremely low and high workload are seen. The preliminary ecological validation study shows support for these effects.
author Cerar, Katherine
author_facet Cerar, Katherine
author_sort Cerar, Katherine
title Examining the Impact of Increasing Location-Based Information Fidelity on Command Center Decision-Making
title_short Examining the Impact of Increasing Location-Based Information Fidelity on Command Center Decision-Making
title_full Examining the Impact of Increasing Location-Based Information Fidelity on Command Center Decision-Making
title_fullStr Examining the Impact of Increasing Location-Based Information Fidelity on Command Center Decision-Making
title_full_unstemmed Examining the Impact of Increasing Location-Based Information Fidelity on Command Center Decision-Making
title_sort examining the impact of increasing location-based information fidelity on command center decision-making
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/6284
work_keys_str_mv AT cerarkatherine examiningtheimpactofincreasinglocationbasedinformationfidelityoncommandcenterdecisionmaking
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