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How Does Manipulation of Secondary Task Scheduling Affect Human Performance?
2006
Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting
Systems that can track and intelligently adapt to changes in users' cognitive capacities may help to improve human performance. The experiment reported here was designed to assess the benefit of placing neuro-physiological sensors on users to provide data about their cognitive states that can drive performance mitigations. A test group of 16 participants performed a primary task while monitoring for alerts (secondary task) under four conditions: no-mitigation (alerts presented as they arrive),
doi:10.1177/154193120605001749
fatcat:xdw22u6vwrbm3a35jizdonm4ye