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Dive into the research topics where William N. Dember is active.

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Featured researches published by William N. Dember.


Human Factors | 2000

The effects of signal salience and caffeine on performance, workload, and stress in an abbreviated vigilance task

Jon G. Temple; Joel S. Warm; William N. Dember; Keith S. Jones; Constance M. LaGrange; Gerald Matthews

In 2 experiments, a 12-min computerized vigilance task was demonstrated to reproduce the vigilance decrement, high workload (NASA-TLX), and stressful character (Dundee Stress State Questionnaire) of vigilance tasks lasting 30 min or more. In Experiment 1, the abbreviated task was also shown to duplicate the signal salience effect, a major finding associated with long-duration vigilance tasks. Moreover, Experiment 2 showed that performance on the abbreviated task can be enhanced by caffeine - a drug that benefits long-duration tasks. This enhancement effect was limited to performance, however, suggesting that caffeine influences factors that control signal detection but not those that control task-induced stress. The results parallel those obtained with long-duration tasks and support a resource-depletion model of the vigilance decrement. The abbreviated task might be useful in situations in which long-duration tasks are precluded (e.g., performance assessment batteries, neuropsychological testing, and brain imaging).


Human Factors | 2003

The vigilance decrement reflects limitations in effortful attention, not mindlessness.

Rebecca Grier; Joel S. Warm; William N. Dember; Gerald Matthews; Traci L. Galinsky; James L. Szalma; Raja Parasuraman

Robertson, Manly, Andrade, Baddeley, and Yiend (1997) proposed that the decline in performance efficiency over time in vigilance tasks (the vigilance decrement) is characterized by “mindlessness” or a withdrawal of attentional effort from the monitoring assignment. We assessed that proposal using measures of perceived mental workload (NASA-TLX) and stress (Dundee Stress State Questionnaire). Two types of vigilance task were employed: a traditional version, wherein observers made button-press responses to signify detection of rarely occurring critical signals, and a modified version, developed by Robertson et al. to promote mindlessness via routinization, wherein button-press responses acknowledged frequently occurring neutral stimulus events and response withholding signified critical signal detection. The vigilance decrement was observed in both tasks, and both tasks generated equally elevated levels of workload and stress, the latter including cognitions relating to performance adequacy. Vigilance performance seems better characterized by effortful attention (mindfulness) than by mindlessness. Actual or potential applications of this research include procedures to reduce the information-processing demand imposed by vigilance tasks and the stress associated with such tasks.


Archive | 1987

Vigilance: Taxonomy And Utility

Raja Parasuraman; Joel S. Warm; William N. Dember

This paper examines the current status of a taxonomy of vigilance that integrates several critical aspects of performance as seen in the laboratory. Among these are (1) intertask and intermodal relations, (2) perceptual and response bias determinants of the vigilance decrement and (3) the impact of resource demands. The pertinence of laboratory studies of vigilance to operational situations and to other areas of psychological inquiry is also discussed.


Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 1996

Mood and global-local visual processing

Michael R. Basso; Bruce K. Schefft; M. Douglas Ris; William N. Dember

Testing hypotheses derived from neuropsychological models of mood, as well as the association of mood states and personality characteristics with global-local visual processing, were examined. Fifty-nine men completed measures associated with depression and positive mood, and were administered a brief perceptual judgment task that assessed global-local visual processing biases. Additionally, 19 of these 59 subjects were administered measures of anxiety and optimism-pessimism and completed an expanded judgment task. Affective and personality variables were then correlated with judgment task performances. Consistent with predictions, positive mood and optimism were directly associated with a global bias and inversely related to a local bias. A converse pattern of findings was obtained with depression and trait anxiety. Implications for research concerning other aspects of visual processing are discussed.


Current Psychology | 1989

The measurement of optimism and pessimism

William N. Dember; Stephanie H. Martin; Mary K. Hummer; Steven R. Howe; Richard S. Melton

Procedures employed in the development and validation of a new Optimism & Pessimism Scale are described, and information about test-retest reliability is reported. Internal consistency analyses and other data suggest that optimism and pessimism are not polar opposites and bring up questions about the intrerelatedness of the cognitive and affective realms. The magnitude of the correlation between pessimism and measures of anxiety suggests a link between this measure and the Negative Affectivity construct, and the potential relationships among optimism, pessimism, the Pollyanna Principle, and Positive and Negative Affect are discussed. Conceptually, it appears that optimism and pessimism may aid in psychological defense by helping to bind anxiety.


Theoretical Issues in Ergonomics Science | 2003

Automation cueing modulates cerebral blood flow and vigilance in a simulated air traffic control task

Edward M. Hitchcock; Joel S. Warm; Gerald Matthews; William N. Dember; Paula K. Shear; Lloyd D. Tripp; David W. Mayleben; Raja Parasuraman

Automation cueing of impending hazards or critical signals can have both beneficial and deleterious effects on the human operator, depending on automation reliability. To assess these effects, transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD), a low-cost non-invasive procedure that allows continuous monitoring of blood flow in the left and right cerebral hemispheres, was used to examine the influence of automation cues of varying reliability on vigilance performance in a 40-min simulated air traffic control task. Four levels of automation cue reliability (100, 80 and 40% reliable cueing and a no-cue control) were combined factorially with two levels of critical signal salience (high and low). For both levels of signal salience, the detection rate of critical signals was very high and remained stable over time with 100% cue-reliability, but declined over time in the remaining cue conditions, so that, by the end of the task, performance efficiency was best in the 100% condition followed in order by the 80%, 40%, and no-cue conditions. These performance effects for cueing were very closely mirrored by changes in cerebral blood flow in the right (but not the left) hemisphere in conjunction with low salience signals. The results fit well with an attentional resource model of vigilance and show that cerebral blood flow provides a metabolic index of the utilization of information-processing resources during sustained attention. The demonstration of systematic modulation of cerebral blood flow with time on task, automation cueing and signal salience also provides strong evidence for a right hemispheric brain system that is involved in the functional control of vigilance performance over time. Measurement of the activation of this system, as a reflection of operator mental workload, can, therefore, inform the design of optimal automation cueing.


Science | 1967

Recovery of Masked Visual Targets by Inhibition of the Masking Stimulus

William N. Dember; Dean G. Purcell

Theories of visual backward masking all assume that a masked target is eliminated from the visual system. Experiments on reaction time to masked signals suggest otherwise, as does a recent demonstration that a masked target can be restored to phenomenal awareness by backward masking of the targets mask. Two experiments are reported here that substantiate the possibility of recovering a masked target, by using different stimulus materials and a more elaborate design than was employed in the first demonstration of this effect.


Human Factors | 2004

Effects of Sensory Modality and Task Duration on Performance, Workload, and Stress in Sustained Attention

James L. Szalma; Joel S. Warm; Gerald Matthews; William N. Dember; Ernest M. Weiler; Ashley Meier; F. Thomas Eggemeier

The workload and stress associated with a 40-min vigilance task were examined under conditions wherein observers monitored an auditory or a visual display for changes in signal duration. Global workload scores fell in the midrange of the NASA Task Load Index, with scores on the Frustration subscale increasing linearly over time. These effects were unrelated to the sensory modality of signals. However, sensory modality was a significant moderator variable for stress. Observers became more stressed over time as indexed by responses to the Dundee Stress State Questionnaire, with evidence of recovery in the auditory but not the visual condition toward the end of the watch. This result and the finding that signal detection accuracy - although equated for difficulty under alerted conditions - favored the auditory mode, indicate that display modality and time on task should be considered carefully in the design of operations requiring sustained attention in order to enhance performance and reduce stress. Actual or potential applications of this research include domains in which monitoring is a crucial part, such as baggage screening, security operations, medical monitoring, and power plant operations.


Archive | 1998

Viewing psychology as a whole: The integrative science of William N. Dember.

William N. Dember; Robert R. Hoffman; Michael F. Sherrick; Joel S. Warm

Basic Perceptual Mechanisms and Phenomena Basic Attentional Mechanisms and Phenomena Novelty and Complexity Perception and Cognition Cognition, Emotion and Motivation Solving Practical Problems Pathways - Past and Future.


Human Factors | 1993

Psychophysical determinants of stress in sustained attention.

Traci L. Galinsky; Roger R. Rosa; Joel S. Warm; William N. Dember

To date, research on the stress of sustained attention tasks has not explored the extent to which such stress is determined by the psychophysical aspects of the monitored display. In the present study, the effects of the sensory modality of signals (audition and vision) and the background event rate (5 and 40 events/min) on task-induced stress were examined in a vigilance situation. Critical signals for detection were slight changes in stimulus duration. Stress was indexed by motor restlessness and subjective reports of fatigue. Restlessness and subjective fatigue increased dramatically across a 50-min watch in all conditions. Stress effects were most notable in the case of visual monitoring but were unrelated to variations in event rate. Hence, from a psychophysical perspective, the stress of sustained attention seems to be identified more specifically with the sensory modality of signals than with the event rate context in which they appear.

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Joel S. Warm

Wright-Patterson Air Force Base

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Peter A. Hancock

University of Central Florida

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James L. Szalma

University of Central Florida

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