Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10420033 Reliability Engineering & System Safety 2005 17 Pages PDF
Abstract
Mode confusions are a significant safety concern in safety-critical systems, for example in aircraft. A mode confusion occurs when the observed behaviour of a technical system is out of sync with the user's mental model of its behaviour. But the notion is described only informally in the literature. We present a rigorous way of modelling the user and the machine in a shared-control system. This enables us to propose precise definitions of 'mode' and 'mode confusion' for safety-critical systems. We then validate these definitions against the informal notions in the literature. A new classification of mode confusions by cause leads to a number of design recommendations for shared-control systems. These help in avoiding mode confusion problems. Our approach supports the automated detection of remaining mode confusion problems. We apply our approach practically to a wheelchair robot.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
Authors
, ,