Abstract

The National Research Council of Canada and Defence Research and Development Canada flight-tested the U.S. Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory's Tactile Situational Awareness System (TSAS) in a dynamic task. The TSAS vest uses small pneumatic actuators or ‘tactors’ to transmit information to the pilot. Eleven pilots used the TSAS to cue horizontal axis performance in a land-based deck landing task flown in the NRC Bell 205 helicopter. Pilots tracked a vertically moving target with and without the TSAS in good and degraded visual conditions. The TSAS effectively cued longitudinal fore/aft drifts and reduced RMS error. It had less effect on lateral positioning error, possibly due to the presence of strong visual cues. Pilot situational awareness during degraded visual environment conditions in high sea states was significantly improved by the TSAS, as measured by the China Lake situational awareness rating scale. No change in workload, as measured by Modified Cooper Harper Workload Scale, was attributable to the TSAS use. The improvements in situational awareness and the reduction in longitudinal error suggest that the TSAS would be beneficial for helicopter ship deck landing.

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