Title: Self-Separation from the Air and Ground Perspective
1Self-Separation from the Air and Ground
Perspective
- Margaret-Anne Mackintosh, Melisa Dunbar, Sandra
Lozito, Patricia Cashion, Alison McGann, Victoria
Dulchinos NASA Ames Research Center
mmackintosh_at_mail.arc.nasa.gov - Rob Ruigrok, Jacco Hoekstra, Ronald Van Gent
National Aerospace Laboratory, NLR ruigrok_at_nlr.nl
2Introduction
- NLR Free Flight with Airborne Separation
Assurance - Air perspective
- NASA Ames Air-Ground Integration Study
- Air and Ground perspective
3NLR Human-In-The-Loop Study Introduction
- NLR Free Flight with Airborne Separation
Assurance - Free Flight Concept Development
- Traffic Experiment Manager off-line simulations
- Find a suitable base-line concept
- Free Flight Safety Analysis
- Traffic Organization and Perturbation AnalyZer
(TOPAZ) - Predict critical non-nominal situations
- Free Flight Human-in-the-Loop Simulation
Experiment - NLRs Research Flight Simulator
- Human Factors Issues
- Validation of concept with Human-in-the-Loop
4NLR Human-In-The-Loop Study Methods
- Probe the limits
- No Air Traffic Control
- Air crew responsible for traffic separation
- All aircraft in scenario fully equipped
- Automatic Dependent Surveillance - Broadcast
(ADS-B) - Conflict Detection
- Conflict Resolution
- Cockpit Display of Traffic Information (CDTI)
- Cruise flight only
- Direct routing
- Optimal cruise altitude
5NLR Human-In-The-Loop Study Scenarios
- 8 crews, 18 runs per crew, 20 minutes per run
- current airline pilots
- 2 days including half a day of training
- Traffic Densities Single, Double, Triple
- Level of Automation Manual, Execute Combined,
Execute
Separate - Non-Nominal Other aircraft failures/events,
Own aircraft
failures/events,
Delay time increased
6NLR Human-In-The-Loop Study Concept
- Modified Voltage Potential
- Characteristics
- Fail safe
- Co-operative
- More options
- Clear to pilot
- Communication not required
Similar in vertical plane
7NLR Human-In-The-Loop Study Flight Crew Interface
- Navigation Display
- Traffic Symbology
- Conflict Detection
- Resolution Advisories
- Vertical Navigation Display
- Extra EFIS Control Panel functionality
- Modifications to Autopilot
- Execute Combined
- Execute Separate
- Aural alerts
8NLR Human-In-The-Loop StudySubjective Results
Acceptability
- Distribution of responses as a function of
the three densities, across all sessions,
across all subject pilots - Acceptability 91.5 (single), 83.0
(double), 78.7 (triple)
9NLR Human-In-The-Loop StudySubjective Results
Safety
- Distribution of responses as a function of
the three densities, across all sessions,
across all subject pilots - Safety 88.3 (single), 75.5 (double),
71.3 (triple)
10NLR Human-In-The-Loop StudySubjective Results
Workload
- Rating Scale of Mental Effort (RSME)
- Rating less than 40 (costing some effort)
over all densities - Results similar to cruise phase results in
current ATC scenarios
11NLR Human-In-The-Loop Study Objective Results
EPOG
- Eye-Point-Of-Gaze measurements
- Pilot Flying and Pilot-Not-Flying
- Percentages of the total fixation duration,
averaged over the Pilot Flying and
Pilot-Non-Flying, across all sessions
- Primary Flight Display 8.1
- Lateral Navigation Display 48.9
- Vertical Navigation Display 7.6
12NLR Human-In-The-Loop Study Objective Results
Maneuvers
- Distribution of maneuvers as a function of
the three different modes, across all
sessions, across all subject pilots - Maneuvers Heading 71.0 Speed 40.3
Altitude 48.7
13NASA Air-Ground Integration Study Methods
- Boeing 747-400 simulator and Airspace Operations
Lab - Flight deck and controller perspectives
- 8 DIA enroute scenarios (20 minutes in duration)
- 10 flight crews/10 controllers
- New display features on flight deck
- Airborne alert logic (no ground conflict probe)
- Controller tools similar to those at DIA
- Controller monitoring more than controlling
- Run in March/April 1998
14Background/Research Goal
- Background
- RTCA Free Flight document recommends aircraft
self-separation in particular situations (e.g.,
enroute environment) - Requires new conceptual airspace that includes
human performance parameters - Aircraft self-separation will require a shift in
roles and responsibilities between the users on
the ground and in the air - Research Goal
- To conduct early simulations examining flight
deck human performance parameters
15NASA Air-Ground Integration Study Scenarios
- Traffic on flight deck (ADS-B range 120 nms)
- Traffic on controllers radar display (DIA Sector
9) - Representation of high v. low density/clutter
- High 16-17 aircraft, low 6-8 aircraft
- Blocker aircraft preventing most common
resolution - Conflict event types high and low density
- Obtuse angle
- Acute angle
- Right angle
- Almost intruder
16NASA Air-Ground Integration StudyDisplays
- Flight deck display
- No early alert indication (prior to alert zone
transgression) - Alert zone transgression display features
- Temporal predictors and call signs selectable
- Controller Display
- Similar features as those currently in DIA (e.g.,
vector lines, J rings) - Some features from CTAS, but no enhanced functions
17NASA Air-Ground Integration Study Flight Crew
Results
- Density and detection time
- Flight crews took longer to detect conflicts in
high density compared to low density scenarios - Conflict Angles and detection time
- No differences in detection times between the
conflict angles - Ratings of conflict detection and time pressure
- Significant increase in reported workload and
time pressure as a function of traffic density - No differences for almost intruder for detection
times
18NASA Air-Ground Integration StudyPilot Detection
Times
19NASA Air-Ground Integration StudyController
Results
- Effects of traffic density and conflict angle on
detection times - Interaction between density and angle
- Longer detection time in obtuse angle high
density v. obtuse angle low density - Shorter detection time in acute angle high
density v. right angle and obtuse angle high
density - Ratings of workload and task complexity
- Significant increase in ratings of workload and
complexity as a function of density - No differences for almost intruder detection times
20NASA Air-Ground Integration StudyController
Detection Times
21General Summary
- Consistent Findings across Studies
- Impact for increasing density
- density may be exacerbated by other factors
- existence of abnormal situations (e.g. weather)
may limit self-separation - Losses of minimum separation
- flight crews try to minimize separation between
aircraft while maintaining legal separation - controllers wanted larger separation than the
flight crews maintained (NASA study)
22General Summary
- Unique Findings
- Pilots fixate on CDTI 60 of the time and PFD 10
of the time (NLR study) - Pilots reported spending too much time on the
CDTI (NASA study) - Performance parameter usage
- Heading was most common parameter used (NLR
study) - similar to previous NASA studies
- Altitude was most common parameter used (NASA
study) - inclusion of the blocker aircraft in most
common lateral escape path
23General Summary
- Unique Findings (NASA)
- Conflict angles affect controllers and flight
crews - controller conflict detect times
- flight crew timing and type of maneuver
- Density and conflict angle may interact
- Frequent air-to-air communication
24Future Research Issues
- Addition of abnormal situations for workload
realism (e.g., weather, winds, SUA, passenger
problems) - Assessment of data link for communications to
help frequency congestion - Simulation including representation of additional
carriers and dispatch - Information requirements assessment for shared
situation awareness