Design and testing of an unlimited field-of-regard synthetic vision head-worn display for commercial aircraft surface operations

Experiments and flight tests have shown that a Head-Up Display (HUD) and a head-down, electronic moving map (EMM) can be enhanced with Synthetic Vision for airport surface operations. While great success in ground operations was demonstrated with a HUD, the research noted that two major HUD limitations during ground operations were their monochrome form and limited, fixed field of regard. A potential solution to these limitations found with HUDs may be emerging Head Worn Displays (HWDs). HWDs are small, lightweight full color display devices that may be worn without significant encumbrance to the user. By coupling the HWD with a head tracker, unlimited field-of-regard may be realized for commercial aviation applications. In the proposed paper, the results of two ground simulation experiments conducted at NASA Langley are summarized. The experiments evaluated the efficacy of head-worn display applications of Synthetic Vision and Enhanced Vision technology to enhance transport aircraft surface operations. The two studies tested a combined six display concepts: (1) paper charts with existing cockpit displays, (2) baseline consisting of existing cockpit displays including a Class III electronic flight bag display of the airport surface; (3) an advanced baseline that also included displayed traffic and routing information, (4) a modified version of a HUD and EMM display demonstrated in previous research; (5) an unlimited field-of-regard, full color, head-tracked HWD with a conformal 3-D synthetic vision surface view; and (6) a fully integrated HWD concept. The fully integrated HWD concept is a head-tracked, color, unlimited field-of-regard concept that provides a 3-D conformal synthetic view of the airport surface integrated with advanced taxi route clearance, taxi precision guidance, and data-link capability. The results of the experiments showed that the fully integrated HWD provided greater path performance compared to using paper charts alone. Further, when comparing the HWD with the HUD concept, there were no differences in path performance. In addition, the HWD and HUD concepts were rated via paired-comparisons the same in terms of situational awareness and workload. However, there were over twice as many taxi incursion events with the HUD than the HWD.

[1]  Robert S. Bolia,et al.  ASSESSING SIMULATOR SICKNESS IN A SEE-THROUGH HMD: EFFECTS OF TIME DELAY, TIME ON TASK, AND TASK COMPLEXITY , 2000 .

[2]  Robert S. Kennedy,et al.  Simulator Sickness Questionnaire: An enhanced method for quantifying simulator sickness. , 1993 .

[3]  I. Brown,et al.  Vision in Vehicles III , 1991 .

[4]  Becky L. Hooey,et al.  IMPROVING EVALUATION AND SYSTEM DESIGN THROUGH THE USE OF OFF-NOMINAL TESTING: A METHODOLOGY FOR SCENARIO DEVELOPMENT , 2003 .

[5]  Becky L. Hooey,et al.  A Post-Hoc Analysis of Navigation Errors During Surface Operations: Identification of Contributing Factors and Mitigating Solutions , 2002 .

[6]  Denise R. Jones Runway incursion prevention system testing at the Wallops Flight Facility , 2005, SPIE Defense + Commercial Sensing.

[7]  Michael A. Vidulich,et al.  Testing a Subjective Metric of Situation Awareness , 1991 .

[8]  Randall E. Bailey,et al.  Flight testing an integrated synthetic vision system , 2005, SPIE Defense + Commercial Sensing.

[9]  Anthony D. Andre,et al.  The Design of Aircraft Cockpit Displays for Low-Visibility Taxi Operations , 2001 .

[10]  Michael D. Byrne,et al.  Using Computational Cognitive Modeling to Diagnose Possible Sources of Aviation Error , 2005 .

[11]  Anthony D. Andre,et al.  Taxiway Navigation and Situation Awareness (T-NASA) System: Problem, Design Philosophy, and Description of an Integrated Display Suite for Low-Visibility Airport Surface Operations , 1996 .

[12]  Barbara G. Kanki,et al.  An Evaluation of the Taxiway Navigation and Situation Awareness (T-NASA) System in High-Fidelity Simulation , 1998 .

[13]  Thomas J. Sharkey,et al.  Simulator induced alteration of head movements (SIAHM) , 1992 .

[14]  Jarvis J. Arthur,et al.  Synthetic vision enhanced surface operations and flight procedures rehearsal tool , 2006, SPIE Defense + Commercial Sensing.