Representing and inferring mental workload via defeasible reasoning: A comparison with the NASA task load index and the workload profile

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

Abstract

The NASA Task Load Index (NASA - TLX) and the Workload Profile (WP) are likely the most employed instruments for subjective mental workload (MWL) measurement. Numerous areas have made use of these methods for assessing human performance and thusly improving the design of systems and tasks. Unfortunately, MWL is still a vague concept, with different definitions and no universal measure. This research investigates the use of defeasible reasoning to represent and assess MWL. Reasoning is defeasible when a conclusion, supported by a set of premises, can be retracted in the light of new information. In this empirical study, this type of reasoning is considered for modelling MWL, given the intrinsic uncertainty involved in assessing it. In particular, it is shown how the NASA - TLX and the WP can be translated into defeasible structures whose inferences can achieve similar validity of the original instruments, even when less information is available. It is also discussed how these structures can have a higher extensibility and how their inferences are more self-explanatory than the ones produced by the NASA - TLX and WP.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)126-140
Number of pages15
JournalCEUR Workshop Proceedings
Volume2012
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017
Event1st Workshop on Advances In Argumentation In Artificial Intelligence, AI^3 2017 - Bari, Italy
Duration: 16 Nov 201717 Nov 2017

Keywords

  • NASA Task Load Index
  • Workload Profile
  • subjective mental workload
  • defeasible reasoning
  • human performance
  • system design
  • task design
  • uncertainty
  • empirical study
  • modelling

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