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An experiment conducted using a head-up display (HUD) suggests that the demonstrated superiority of the HUD over a conventional instrument panel stems from its superior layout of information. A HUD display presents instrument-panel information to pilots in such a way that the symbols appear as a virtual image at optical infinity superimposed on the landscape. In the experiment conducted, the luminance of the display symbology and its angle subtended at the eye remained fixed, while optical distance and gaze angle were varied. Concomitant measures of eye movements, eye accommodative state, and decision-making time concerning airspeed, altitude and runway condition were obtained. It is found that, while looking straight ahead, at zero diopters, the HUD shortens decision time by 80 to 90 msec, not statistically significant at the 0.05 (slope of diopter/gaze interaction) level. The question of a cognitive overload induced by the luminous symbols of the HUD is subsequently addressed.
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Daniel J. Weintraub
Michigan Department of Transportation
Richard F. Haines
Ames Research Center
Robert J. Randle
Itawamba Community College
Proceedings of the Human Factors Society Annual Meeting
University of Michigan
Ames Research Center
Michigan United
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Weintraub et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a20e9cbf76165bc1becc908 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/154193128502900621