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RECENT PUBLICATIONS
Smith, M.E. & Gevins, A. (2005). Neurophysiologic monitoring of cognitive brain function for tracking mental
workload and fatigue during operation of a PC-based flight simulator. In J.A. Caldwell and N.J. Wesensten (Eds.)
Biomonitoring for Physiological and Cognitive Performance during Military Operations.
Proceedings of SPIE, Vol 5797-17, pp. 116-126.
ABSTRACT
In one experiment, EEG recordings were made during a daytime session while 16 well-rested participants
performed versions of a PC flight simulator task that were either low, moderate, or high in difficulty.
In another experiment, the same subjects repeatedly performed high difficulty versions of the same task
during an all night session with total sleep deprivation. Multivariate EEG metrics of cortical activation
were derived for frontal brain regions essential for working memory and executive control processes that
are presumably important for maintaining situational awareness, central brain regions essential for
sensorimotor control, and posterior parietal and occipital regions essential for visuoperceptual processing.
During the daytime session each of these regional measures displayed greater activation during the high
difficulty task than during the low difficulty task, and degree of cortical activation was positively
correlated with subjective workload ratings in these well-rested subjects. During the overnight session,
cortical activation declined with time-on-task, and the degree of this decline over frontal regions was
negatively correlated with subjective workload ratings. Since participants were already highly skilled
in the task, such changes likely reflect fatigue-related diminishment of frontal executive capability
rather than practice effects. These findings suggest that the success of efforts to gauge mental workload
via proxy cortical activation measures in the context of adaptive automation systems will likely depend
on use of user models that take both task demands and the operator's state of alertness into account.
Further methodological development of the measurement approach outlined here would be required to
achieve a practical, effective objective means for monitoring transient changes in cognitive brain
function during performance of complex real-world tasks
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