Authors
Christopher A Monk, Deborah A Boehm-Davis, J Gregory Trafton
Publication date
2002/9
Journal
Proceedings of the human factors and ergonomics society annual meeting
Volume
46
Issue
22
Pages
1824-1828
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
The visual occlusion technique has received considerable attention in recent years as a method for measuring the interruptible aspects of in-vehicle information system (IVIS) task performance. Because the visual occlusion technique lacks a loading task during “occluded” periods, an alternate method was adopted to provide increased sensitivity to the attentional costs of interruptions on IVIS-style task performance. Participants alternated between performing a VCR programming task and a simple tracking task. Results indicate that it does matter at which point the VCR task is interrupted in terms of time to resume the VCR task. Specifically, the resumption time, or lag, was lowest right before beginning a new task stage such as entering the show end-time, or when performing a repetitive scrolling task. The results suggest that it might be appropriate to include measures of resumption lag when testing the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
CA Monk, DA Boehm-Davis, JG Trafton - Proceedings of the human factors and ergonomics …, 2002