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Dive into the research topics where Sara R. Wilson is active.

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Featured researches published by Sara R. Wilson.


10th AIAA Aviation Technology, Integration, and Operations (ATIO) Conference | 2010

Comparison of Ground-Based and Airborne Function Allocation Concepts for NextGen Using Human-In-The-Loop Simulations

David J. Wing; Thomas Prevot; Jennifer L. Murdoch; Christopher D. Cabrall; Jeffrey Homola; Lynne Martin; Joey Mercer; Sherwood T. Hoadley; Sara R. Wilson; Clay E. Hubbs; James P. Chamberlain; Ryan C. Chartrand; Maria C. Consiglio; Michael T. Palmer

Investigation of function allocation for the Next Generation Air Transportation System is being conducted by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). To provide insight on comparability of different function allocations for separation assurance, two human-in-the-loop simulation experiments were conducted on homogeneous airborne and ground-based approaches to four-dimensional trajectory-based operations, one referred to as ground-based automated separation assurance (groundbased) and the other as airborne trajectory management with self-separation (airborne). In the coordinated simulations at NASA s Ames and Langley Research Centers, controllers for the ground-based concept at Ames and pilots for the airborne concept at Langley managed the same traffic scenarios using the two different concepts. The common scenarios represented a significant increase in airspace demand over current operations. Using common independent variables, the simulations varied traffic density, scheduling constraints, and the timing of trajectory change events. Common metrics were collected to enable a comparison of relevant results. Where comparisons were possible, no substantial differences in performance or operator acceptability were observed. Mean schedule conformance and flight path deviation were considered adequate for both approaches. Conflict detection warning times and resolution times were mostly adequate, but certain conflict situations were detected too late to be resolved in a timely manner. This led to some situations in which safety was compromised and/or workload was rated as being unacceptable in both experiments. Operators acknowledged these issues in their responses and ratings but gave generally positive assessments of the respective concept and operations they experienced. Future studies will evaluate technical improvements and procedural enhancements to achieve the required level of safety and acceptability and will investigate the integration of airborne and ground-based capabilities within the same airspace to leverage the benefits of each concept.


AIAA Modeling and Simulation Technologies (MST) Conference | 2013

Evaluation of Flight Deck-Based Interval Management Crew Procedure Feasibility

Sara R. Wilson; Jennifer L. Murdoch; Clay Hubbs; Kurt A. Swieringa

Air traffic demand is predicted to increase over the next 20 years, creating a need for new technologies and procedures to support this growth in a safe and efficient manner. The National Aeronautics and Space Administrations (NASA) Air Traffic Management Technology Demonstration - 1 (ATD-1) will operationally demonstrate the feasibility of efficient arrival operations combining ground-based and airborne NASA technologies. The integration of these technologies will increase throughput, reduce delay, conserve fuel, and minimize environmental impacts. The ground-based tools include Traffic Management Advisor with Terminal Metering for precise time-based scheduling and Controller Managed Spacing decision support tools for better managing aircraft delay with speed control. The core airborne technology in ATD-1 is Flight deck-based Interval Management (FIM). FIM tools provide pilots with speed commands calculated using information from Automatic Dependent Surveillance - Broadcast. The precise merging and spacing enabled by FIM avionics and flight crew procedures will reduce excess spacing buffers and result in higher terminal throughput. This paper describes a human-in-the-loop experiment designed to assess the acceptability and feasibility of the ATD-1 procedures used in a voice communications environment. This experiment utilized the ATD-1 integrated system of ground-based and airborne technologies. Pilot participants flew a high-fidelity fixed base simulator equipped with an airborne spacing algorithm and a FIM crew interface. Experiment scenarios involved multiple air traffic flows into the Dallas-Fort Worth Terminal Radar Control airspace. Results indicate that the proposed procedures were feasible for use by flight crews in a voice communications environment. The delivery accuracy at the achieve-by point was within +/- five seconds and the delivery precision was less than five seconds. Furthermore, FIM speed commands occurred at a rate of less than one per minute, and pilots found the frequency of the speed commands to be acceptable at all times throughout the experiment scenarios.


ieee/aiaa digital avionics systems conference | 2011

Integration of weather avoidance and traffic separation

Maria C. Consiglio; James P. Chamberlain; Sara R. Wilson

This paper describes a dynamic convective weather avoidance concept that compensates for weather motion uncertainties; the integration of this weather avoidance concept into a prototype 4-D trajectory-based Airborne Separation Assurance System (ASAS) application; and test results from a batch (non-piloted) simulation of the integrated application with high traffic densities and a dynamic convective weather model. The weather model can simulate a number of pseudo-random hazardous weather patterns, such as slow — or fast-moving cells and opening or closing weather gaps, and also allows for modeling of onboard weather radar limitations in range and azimuth. The weather avoidance concept employs nested “core” and “avoid” polygons around convective weather cells, and the simulations assess the effectiveness of various avoid polygon sizes in the presence of different weather patterns, using traffic scenarios representing approximately two times the current traffic density in en-route airspace. Results from the simulation experiment show that the weather avoidance concept is effective over a wide range of weather patterns and cell speeds. Avoid polygons that are only 2‣3 miles larger than their core polygons are sufficient to account for weather uncertainties in almost all cases, and traffic separation performance does not appear to degrade with the addition of weather polygon avoidance. Additional “lessons learned” from the batch simulation study are discussed in the paper, along with insights for improving the weather avoidance concept.


17th AIAA Aviation Technology, Integration, and Operations Conference | 2017

Flight Crew Survey Responses from the Interval Management (IM) Avionics Phase 2 Flight Test

Brian T. Baxley; Kurt A. Swieringa; Sara R. Wilson; Roy D. Roper; Clay Hubbs; Paul A. Goess; Richard F. Shay

The Interval Management (IM) Avionics Phase 2 flight test used three aircraft over a nineteen day period to operationally evaluate a prototype IM avionics. Quantitative data were collected on aircraft state data and IM spacing algorithm performance, and qualitative data were collected through end-of-scenario and end-of-day flight crew surveys. The majority of the IM operations met the performance goals established for spacing accuracy at the Achieveby Point and the Planned Termination Point, however there were operations that did not meet goals for a variety of reasons. While the positive spacing accuracy results demonstrate the prototype IM avionics can contribute to the overall air traffic goal, critical issues were also identified that need to be addressed to enhance IM performance. The first category was those issues that impacted the conduct and results of the flight test, but are not part of the IM concept or procedures. These included the design of arrival and approach procedures was not ideal to support speed as the primary control mechanism, the ground-side of the Air Traffic Management Technology Demonstration (ATD-1) integrated concept of operations was not part of the flight test, and the high workload to manually enter the information required to conduct an IM operation. The second category was issues associated with the IM spacing algorithm or flight crew procedures. These issues include the high frequency of IM speed changes and reversals (accelerations), a mismatch between the deceleration rate used by the spacing algorithm and the actual aircraft performance, and some spacing error calculations were sensitive to normal operational variations in aircraft airspeed or altitude which triggered additional IM speed changes. Once the issues in these two categories are addressed, the future IM avionics should have considerable promise supporting the goals of improving system throughput and aircraft efficiency.


17th AIAA Aviation Technology, Integration, and Operations Conference | 2017

Flight Test Evaluation of the ATD-1 Interval Management Application

Kurt A. Swieringa; Sara R. Wilson; Brian T. Baxley; Roy D. Roper; Terence S. Abbott; Ian Levitt; Julien Scharl

Interval Management (IM) is a concept designed to be used by air traffic controllers and flight crews to more efficiently and precisely manage inter-aircraft spacing. Both government and industry have been working together to develop the IM concept and standards for both ground automation and supporting avionics. NASA contracted with Boeing, Honeywell, and United Airlines to build and flight test an avionics prototype based on NASA’s spacing algorithm and conduct a flight test. The flight test investigated four different types of IM operations over the course of nineteen days, and included en route, arrival, and final approach phases of flight. This paper examines the spacing accuracy achieved during the flight test and the rate of speed commands provided to the flight crew. Many of the time-based IM operations met or exceeded the operational design goals set out in the standards for the maintain operations and a subset of the achieve operations. Those operations which did not meet the goals were due to issues that are identified and will be further analyzed.


ieee aiaa digital avionics systems conference | 2012

Airport traffic conflict detection and resolution algorithm evaluation

Denise R. Jones; Ryan C. Chartrand; Sara R. Wilson; Sean A. Commo; Sharon D. Otero; Glover D. Barker

A conflict detection and resolution (CD&R) concept for the terminal maneuvering area (TMA) was evaluated in a fast-time batch simulation study at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Langley Research Center. The CD&R concept is being designed to enhance surface situation awareness and provide cockpit alerts of potential conflicts during runway, taxi, and low altitude air-to-air operations. The purpose of the study was to evaluate the performance of aircraft-based CD&R algorithms in the TMA, as a function of surveillance accuracy. This paper gives an overview of the CD&R concept, simulation study, and results.


14th AIAA Aviation Technology, Integration, and Operations Conference | 2014

An Evaluation of Retrofit Flight Deck Displays for Interval Management

Kurt A. Swieringa; Sara R. Wilson; Rick Shay

NASA’s first Air Traffic Management (ATM) Technology Demonstration (ATD-1) was created to facilitate the transition of the most mature air traffic management technologies from the laboratory to the airspace. One of the selected technologies is Interval Management (IM), which uses automation on board the aircraft to compute speeds that pilots can fly to achieve or maintain precise in-trail spacing behind a preceding aircraft. Since ATD-1 focuses on a near-term environment, the IM prototype used in the ATD-1 flight demonstration will require the use of voice communications to issue IM clearances to the pilots. Retrofit IM displays will be used to enable pilots to enter information into the IM avionics and monitor the IM operation. These displays could consist of an interface used to enter data from an IM clearance and an auxiliary display that presents critical information in the primary field-of-view. A human-in-the-loop experiment was conducted to examine the usability and acceptability of retrofit IM displays. This experiment investigated both numerical and graphical primary field-of-view displays while conducting nominal IM operations. The results provide information that can be used to guide the development of future retrofit IM displays.


ieee aiaa digital avionics systems conference | 2012

SURF IA conflict detection and resolution algorithm evaluation

Denise R. Jones; Ryan C. Chartrand; Sara R. Wilson; Sean A. Commo; Sharon D. Otero; Glover D. Barker

The Enhanced Traffic Situational Awareness on the Airport Surface with Indications and Alerts (SURF IA) algorithm was evaluated in a fast-time batch simulation study at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Langley Research Center. SURF IA is designed to increase flight crew situation awareness of the runway environment and facilitate an appropriate and timely response to potential conflict situations. The purpose of the study was to evaluate the performance of the SURF IA algorithm under various runway scenarios, multiple levels of conflict detection and resolution (CD&R) system equipage, and various levels of horizontal position accuracy. This paper gives an overview of the SURF IA concept, simulation study, and results.


Quality Engineering | 2017

Statistical engineering approach to improve the realism of computer-simulated experiments with aircraft trajectory clustering

Sara R. Wilson; Kurt A. Swieringa; Robert D. Leonard; Evan Freitag; David J. Edwards

ABSTRACT This article presents a statistical engineering approach for clustering aircraft trajectories. The clustering methodology was developed to address the need to incorporate more realistic trajectories in fast-time computer simulations used to evaluate an aircraft spacing algorithm. The methodology is a combination of Dynamic Time Warping and k-Means clustering, and can be viewed as one of many possible solutions to the immediate problem. The implementation of this statistical engineering approach is also repeatable, scalable, and extendable to the investigation of other air traffic management technologies. Development of the clustering methodology is presented in addition to an application and description of results.


Quality Engineering | 2018

Space-filling designs for multi-layer nested factors

Ryan W. Gryder; Sara R. Wilson; Kurt A. Swieringa; David J. Edwards

Abstract This article considers computer experiments where levels for continuous factors are selected in sequential order with the level selected for one factor directly affecting the range of possible levels for the nested factor and, so on, for a finite number of factors. In addition, we assume that the nested relationships between the factors have no closed form solution. We propose an approach for constructing a multilayer nested factor design or multi-NFD for short. This space-filling design approach takes advantage of the maximin criterion and can be analyzed using a standard Gaussian process model. While the multi-NFD approach can be adapted for future computer experiments involving factor relationships of this type, we present results from a particular aerospace computer simulation study.

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Roy D. Roper

Langley Research Center

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David J. Edwards

Virginia Commonwealth University

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