21st European Annual Conference on
Human Decision Making and Control
15th and 16th July 2002, The Senate Room, University of Glasgow.
Themes:
Human operators continue to play a critical role in protecting the safety in many different domains. In spite of
recent advances in automated control and in process integration, human decision making must still be explicitly
considered within the safety-cases that support many complex production processes. In areas such as medicine,
the introduction of computer-based diagnostic aids has simply refocussed attention on the errors that can arise
in interpreting the results provided by these systems. In aviation, the introduction of glass cockpits has provoked
new forms of error that were not common in previous generations of aircraft. These observations explain why the
central topics of EAM2002 continue to be as relevant today as they were when the series was started in 1981.
Papers are encouraged on, but not limited to, the following topics:
detection, mitigation, prevention of human error;
error recovery strategies;
human error and wider forms of risk analysis;
the human component in system dependability;
managerial influences on human performance;
human behavior modeling and user models;
learning processes;
team work and work organization;
crew resource management;
situation awareness;
cooperative systems and CSCW;
human-machine interaction.
Programme Committee:
Jim Alty, Loughborough Univ., UK.
Henning Anderson, Danish Research Labs. Risoe.
Stuart Anderson, Univ. of Edinburgh, U.K.
Guy Boy, EURISCO, France.
P. Carlo Cacciabue, European Research Centre, Italy.
Stephane Chatty, CENA, France.
John Fox, Imperial Cancer Research Fund, UK.
Corin Gurr, University of Edinburgh
Denis Javaux, Univ of Liege, Belgium.
Chris Johnson, Univ. of Glasgow, Scotland.
Richard Kennedy, NATS, UK.
Barry Kirwan, EUROCONTROL, France.
Philippe Palanque, Univ. Toulouse 3, France.
Morten Lind, Danish Technical Univ.
John McCarthy, University College Cork, Ireland.
Amy Pritchett, Georgia Tech., USA.
Penelope Sanderson, Univ. of Queensland, Australia.
Neville Stanton, Brunel Univ., UK.
Kim Vincente, University of Toronto, Canada.
Peter Wieringa, Delft Univ. of Technology, NL.
Peter Wright, University of York, UK.1
More information:
http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/~johnson/eam2002/
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