Title: Stress and Human Error
1Stress and Human Error
2Stress
- A stressor is any thing which
- is not an inherent characteristic of the
human/machine system - is not inherent in the information to be
processed - is (usually) expected to degrade system
performance
3Stressors
- Environmental stressors may include noise,
extreme temperature, vibration, poor light, drugs
alcohol - Psychological stressors might include anxiety,
frustration, fatigue, incentive
4Stress
- Stress may have effects on
- phenomenology/affect (emotions)
- physiology
- sensory physical performance
- For example, difficulty manipulating tools with
cold hands - info processing/cognition
- For example, difficulty concentrating, difficulty
performing mental arithmetic
5How does stress affect performance?
- Yerkes-Dodson law
- Some stress is good, too much is bad. Optimal
level depends on task complexity.
Good
Easy Task
Performance
HardTask
Bad
Low
High
Stress
6Specific effects of stress
- Stress modulates arousal/alertness
- arousal general energy level of operator
- higher levels of arousal are generally better,
i.e., lethargy does not produce good performance.
7Effects of stress on attention
- Stress narrows attentional selectivity
- stress can increase attentional selectivity
- narrows attention to focus on info that is
perceived as most task relevant - under low stress, attention can be too
non-selective - under high stress, attention can be too narrow
- focusing errors
- Stress is distracting
- disrupts attention to relevant info tasks
- selection errors
8Specific effects of stress
- Stress reduces working memory
- can distract attention from verbal or spatial
rehearsal - external noise can degrade info in a WM store
- consequences are worse for complex tasks, which
tend to rely more on WM - can prevent effective training and learning
- training in a less-stressful simulated
environment can enhance learning - Note that retrieval from long-term memory is
spared!
9Effects of stress Decision Making
- Stress affects speed/accuracy of performance
- can degrade perceptual-motor decision making
performance - can encourage people to trade accuracy for speed
- Stress can encourage use of different decision
making strategies - may encourage shift away from slow, deliberative
decision making toward faster more intuitive
strategies - will make DMs more risk-averse
- will degrade performance more for novices, whose
rapid DM skills are poorer
10Specific effects of stress
- Stress produces response perseveration
- encourages people to rely on familiar or
recently-used actions. - People may continue to make the same response
even though it has detrimental consequences. - discourages creative thinking, generation of new
strategies or action plans (cognitive narrowing)
11Effects of specific stressors
- Intermittent Noise
- effects are worse if bursts occur randomly
instead of predictably - distracts observer from an ongoing task
- distracts attention from rehearsal in WM
- effects may last a short time or a relatively
long time - For example, a short burst of noise interrupts
manual tracking for 2-3 secs, interrupts visual
scanning for as long as 30 secs - Example (visual noise)
- Flash bulbs while speaking
12Effects of specific stressors
- Continuous Noise
- encourages people to selectively attend to
sources of info that they think are most relevant - affects attention to spatial non-spatial
stimulus aspects - For example, noise increases detection rates for
signals at central locations, decreases
detections rates for signals in the periphery
(attentional narrowing) - Also reduces the Stroop effect
- Also encourages people to remember some aspects
of stimuli better than others
13Effects of specific stressors
- Continuous Noise
- reduces WM, degrading stored info distracting
from rehearsal manipulation - For example, complex but not simple mental
arithmetic is more difficult in a noisy
environment - continues to degrade performance for 20-30
minutes after noise is terminated, especially if
people believe they have no control over the
noise
14Effects of specific stressors
- Anxiety
- narrows attention
- For example, when led to believe that they were
undergoing conditions of a 60 ft dive in a
pressure chamber, a group of divers shifted
attention away from peripheral signals in a
dual-task study and focused on central signals - reduces WM
- For example, inexperienced public speakers show
WM loss shortly before making presentation in
front of audience - can lead to perseveration
- For example, when threatened with shock for
failure, problem solvers tend to get stuck on an
unsuccessful solution
15Effects of specific stressors
- Time Pressure
- may encourage people to accelerate performance
through inadequate info processing, omitted
processing steps - speed accuracy tradeoffs are likely
- For example, asked to decide which of two groups
of numbers has a higher mean subjects under time
pressure will base judgments on sum - 3, 8, 10 vs. 8, 10
16Effects of specific stressors
- Time Pressure
- may encourage shift away from slow, deliberative
decision making toward faster intuitive decision
making - Although the faster method might not be as
accurate, it is less affected by stress and might
be more accurate than the deliberate methods in a
stressful situation.
17Effects of specific stressors
- Time Pressure
- because experienced DMs are more likely to be
able to retrieve solutions from LTM, their
performance is less affected by time pressure - For example, skilled pilots show better decision
making than novices under time pressure, and are
more likely to carry out their first retrieved
solution - Similarly, experienced chess players are less
degraded under time pressure than novices, and
are more likely to generate a proper move
immediately
18How can operators cope with stress?
- Remove the stressor.
- Put up with it.
- realise your weaknesses
- Try harder.
- may itself be stressful
- may entail speed-accuracy tradeoff
- Change goals/methods
- change DM strategies
- Use a simple heuristic rather than a detailed
analysis
19Remediating effects of stress
- Design tasks displays to avoid exacerbating
cognitive effects of stress - minimize WM demands
- make relevant information attentionally salient
- as much as possible, give operator control over
stressor - Provide knowledge of control over stressors
- make users aware of possible stressors and how
they should cope - make users aware of when they can expect
stressors to begin and end
20Remediating effects of stress
- Train for effective performance under stress
ensure that skills are overlearned - responses become automatic
- information can be retrieved from LTM
- Design train for emergencies
- be aware that overlearning of emergency skills
will not happen during normal operations - That is, emergencies are rare during normal ops.
- make emergency procedures as consistent as
possible with normal procedures
21Human Error
- Human error is an important topic for study
because - provides knowledge of form and causes of error
- errors are consequential
- For example, a study by the Institute of Medicine
estimated that medical errors kill 44,000 or more
patients annually. A newer study found that
medication errors occurred on 5.7 of all orders
in a pair of childrens hospitals
22Errors from Engineering Psychologists View
- Some errors are inevitable
- In SDT, perfect detection/discrimination is rare
because of in Signal Noise curves often overlap - Perfect decision making is impossible in a
probabilistic environment. - e.g. given x, 90 of the time y happens, but
sometimes z happens instead - Time stress often precludes optimal human
performancefor firefighters, soldiers, police,
E.R. doctors, etc., a mediocre choice in time is
better than an optimal choice too late (Klein,
1996)
23Errors from Engineering Psychologists View
- Some errors are only errors in hindsight
- Errors can be the result of a long chain of very
unlikely events. - Hindsight bias (belief that I knew it all
along!) makes cause of errors look obvious in
retrospect. - Second guessing is easier than actually
predicting errors.
24Classifying Errors
- Mistakes intended behavior is inappropriate
under the circumstances - knowledge based mistakes result from poor
information, poor situation awareness, etc. - For example, when the USS Vincennes shot down and
Iranian airliner, - USN had been expecting hostility
- Vincennes was being fired on by Iranian navy
- airliner was not on commercial airline schedules
- airliner was mistakenly identified as military
- airliner was not responding to communications
25Classifying Errors
- Mistakes intended behavior is inappropriate
under the circumstances - rule based mistakes result when info and
situation awareness are good, but operator lacks
experience/knowledge to choose correct action - For example, deciding to let a flight take off
despite knowledge of potentially dangerous
weather
26Classifying Errors
- Slips intended behavior is appropriate, but is
not carried out correctly - Turning on the wrong burner
- Grabbing the wrong bottle of medication
- Hitting Save function instead of Save As
- Audi unintended acceleration
- are especially likely to occur when a familiar or
automatic behavior must be inhibited - Writing the wrong year on a check
- Putting car into drive when it should be in
reverse
27Classifying Errors
- Lapses an intended action is forgotten, not
carried out - Failing to push Timer button on VCR
- Failing to put gas cap on after filling up
- Failing to attach files to email
28Classifying Errors
- Mode Errors action is appropriate in one system
mode, but is carried out in a different mode - typically results because correct mode is not
reinstated when it should be - Failing to put car back into drive after backing
up a little bit - Typing in Overwrite mode instead of Insert mode
- Failing to put remote control into mode
appropriate for device (TV, VCR, stereo)
29Classifying Errors
- Errors can be distinguished from violations.
- Violations intentional choice to disobey rule or
procedure, not meant to cause harm - Flying too close to another aircraft
- Surfacing a submarine without doing full acoustic
or visual search - Releasing bombs from fighter jet without
permission - Setting yourself on fire because someone on MTV
did it - can occur because of organizational emphasis on
costs or productivity instead of safety - For example, failing to meet OSHA standards
30Remediating Errors
- Equipment design
- avoid perceptual confusions, ensure that stimuli
are easily discriminable - Ensure that medicine bottles are clearly labeled
- Ensure that ports on computer are labeled,
discriminable - Bad design USB ports
- make consequences of actions visible to user so
that slips can be detected - Display message onscreen to indicate if VCR is in
Play, Record, FF,
31Remediating Errors
- lock-out inappropriate behaviors
- Dont allow automatic transmission to be moved
from park without the brake pedal depressed. - Dont allow car windows to be raised with one
touch of button - Dont allow key to be removed from vehicle that
isnt in park - Give warning before deleting files
- give reminders
- Ask user if file should be saved before program
shuts down
32Remediating Errors
- avoid multi-mode systems, make mode easily
visible - Make overwrite/insert cursors distinct
- know that errors will occur build
error-tolerant systems avoid systems where
consequential actions are irreversible - Include undo functions in software
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34Human Reliability Analysis
- Reliability probability of making an error
- Serial vs. Redundant Systems
- Serial systems
- only as good as the weakest link
- Redundant systems
- only fails when all systems at a certain level
fail - more robust than a serial system
35Human Reliability Analysis
- Serial System
- only as strong as the weakest link.
- probability of the system failing is the product
of the probability of any part not failing.
.90
.81 probability of success
.90
36Human Reliability Analysis
- Redundant System
- only fails when all systems at a certain level
fail. - probability of the system failing is the product
of the probability of the parts at one level
failing.
.90
.99 probability of success
.90
37Human Reliability Analysis
- Theoretically, HRP could be used to successfully
predict failure rates of a system - Would make it easier to chose between different
designs. - Would spotlight weaknesses in the system.
38Human Reliability Analysis
- However, there are major problems
- Lack of a database
- the data for the frequency of cognitive errors is
rather thin. - Error monitoring and non-independence
- If Humans make an error
- they may change their behavior.
- Humans are complex
- If they detect a weakness (dim display) they may
change their strategies. - Humans take machine reliability into account
- if the machine is not reliable, people will make
adjustments.
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