Detail publikace
Testing Human Errors in Virtual Reality Training
KOTEK, L. TŮMA, Z. ŠUBRT, K. KROUPA, J. BLECHA, P. ROZEHNALOVÁ, J. BLECHA, R. HEINRICH, P.
Anglický název
Testing Human Errors in Virtual Reality Training
Typ
článek v časopise ve Web of Science, Jimp
Jazyk
en
Originální abstrakt
The emergency training of industrial process plant operators is one of the most widely used tools to increase the reliability of human factors to handle an emergency situation. However, the preparation and operation of full-fledged simulators and trainers is very expensive and, therefore, virtual environment tools are used. A question that has not yet been answered is: Can virtual reality match the reliability of other methods of operation and is the same training in virtual reality effective? The experiment was carried out in the three-walled virtual CAVE, with virtual reality glasses, with a computer, a tablet, and a real control panel. Visual stimuli were displayed on the screen of the virtual monitor (green, yellow, and red); auditory stimuli were pure tones with frequencies of 250, 1000 and 4000 Hz. The conclusion should explicitly state if the hypothesis defined for the research has been confirmed and there are significant differences in terms of interface type. Training in virtual reality induces lower operator reliability, but in specific conditions (visual stimuli, virtual reality glasses) can match the reliability of other methods of operation and can be effective.
Anglický abstrakt
The emergency training of industrial process plant operators is one of the most widely used tools to increase the reliability of human factors to handle an emergency situation. However, the preparation and operation of full-fledged simulators and trainers is very expensive and, therefore, virtual environment tools are used. A question that has not yet been answered is: Can virtual reality match the reliability of other methods of operation and is the same training in virtual reality effective? The experiment was carried out in the three-walled virtual CAVE, with virtual reality glasses, with a computer, a tablet, and a real control panel. Visual stimuli were displayed on the screen of the virtual monitor (green, yellow, and red); auditory stimuli were pure tones with frequencies of 250, 1000 and 4000 Hz. The conclusion should explicitly state if the hypothesis defined for the research has been confirmed and there are significant differences in terms of interface type. Training in virtual reality induces lower operator reliability, but in specific conditions (visual stimuli, virtual reality glasses) can match the reliability of other methods of operation and can be effective.
Klíčová slova anglicky
Virtual Reality; human factors; training; human errors; control panel
Vydáno
30.12.2022
Nakladatel
MM Publishing
Místo
Praha
ISSN
1805-0476
Ročník
2022
Číslo
5
Strany od–do
6263–6268
Počet stran
6
BIBTEX
@article{BUT180632,
author="Luboš {Kotek} and Zdeněk {Tůma} and Kamil {Šubrt} and Jiří {Kroupa} and Petr {Blecha} and Jana {Rozehnalová} and Radim {Blecha} and Petr {Heinrich},
title="Testing Human Errors in Virtual Reality Training",
year="2022",
volume="2022",
number="5",
month="December",
pages="6263--6268",
publisher="MM Publishing",
address="Praha",
issn="1805-0476"
}