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Evaluation of Alternative Waveforms for Animated Mimic Displays

Evaluation of Alternative Waveforms for Animated Mimic Displays

Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, 2000
Kevin Bennett
David Woods
Abstract
Animated mimic displays can be used to present system information regarding physical form, function, and causality. However, a potential limitation in current designs has been identified: the presence of ambiguous apparent motion. Two theoretical explanations of ambiguous apparent motion are discussed (Fourier and correspondence hypotheses). Two alternative designs (stair-step and approximate sinusoid luminance waveforms) were evaluated. The velocity matches obtained in Experiment 1 indicate that the sinusoidal waveform produced significantly better performance for both accuracy and latency than the stair-step wave-form. The velocity estimates obtained in Experiment 2 indicate that ambiguous apparent motion was not visible with the sinusoidal waveform, but was with the stair-step waveform. One of the two hypotheses (correspondence) provides a reasonable fit with the obtained velocity estimates. A fundamental goal in the design of animated mimic displays is to provide unambiguous mappings between perceived velocity and actual flow rates. Critical factors in design (e.g., waveform, chromatic/luminance contrast, spatial/temporal frequency) are discussed. Actual or potential applications of this research include the design of more effective animated mimic displays.

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