{"title":"The effect of applied effort on MATB-II performance","authors":"Denys Bulikhov, S. Landry","doi":"10.1080/1463922X.2022.2079155","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract Some of the variability found in measures of mental workload (see e.g. Singleton, Fox, and Whitfield 1973; Wierwille and Connor 1983; Steelman, McCarley, and Wickens 2011; Casner and Gore 2010) may be due to the effort applied to the task by participants, rather than by the independent variable of interest. If true, capturing and removing the variation due to ‘applied effort’ could improve the ability of studies to detect effects of interest. While introducing participants to two sub-tasks derived from Multi-Attribute Task Battery II (Santiago-Espada et al. 2011), the study investigated the influence of applied effort on MATB-II performance measures while holding other effects constant. Two groups of participants each completed easy and hard trials of MATB-II-derived sub-tasks. Treatment group of participants was offered an additional reward if they achieved a sufficiently high performance. The treatment group performed better by just under 4% in both easy and hard trials which provides a suggestion about the size of the effect of applied effort in this study. Measuring or controlling for applied effort can improve the ability of researchers to determine the effects of interventions on workload measures by reducing the amount of variability that is captured as error.","PeriodicalId":22852,"journal":{"name":"Theoretical Issues in Ergonomics Science","volume":"24 1","pages":"233 - 240"},"PeriodicalIF":1.4000,"publicationDate":"2022-05-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Theoretical Issues in Ergonomics Science","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/1463922X.2022.2079155","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"ERGONOMICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract Some of the variability found in measures of mental workload (see e.g. Singleton, Fox, and Whitfield 1973; Wierwille and Connor 1983; Steelman, McCarley, and Wickens 2011; Casner and Gore 2010) may be due to the effort applied to the task by participants, rather than by the independent variable of interest. If true, capturing and removing the variation due to ‘applied effort’ could improve the ability of studies to detect effects of interest. While introducing participants to two sub-tasks derived from Multi-Attribute Task Battery II (Santiago-Espada et al. 2011), the study investigated the influence of applied effort on MATB-II performance measures while holding other effects constant. Two groups of participants each completed easy and hard trials of MATB-II-derived sub-tasks. Treatment group of participants was offered an additional reward if they achieved a sufficiently high performance. The treatment group performed better by just under 4% in both easy and hard trials which provides a suggestion about the size of the effect of applied effort in this study. Measuring or controlling for applied effort can improve the ability of researchers to determine the effects of interventions on workload measures by reducing the amount of variability that is captured as error.
在心理工作量测量中发现的一些可变性(参见Singleton, Fox, and Whitfield 1973;Wierwille and Connor 1983;Steelman, McCarley, and Wickens 2011;Casner和Gore 2010)可能是由于参与者对任务的努力,而不是由兴趣这一自变量决定的。如果这是真的,捕获和消除由于“应用努力”而产生的变化可以提高研究检测感兴趣效应的能力。在向参与者介绍来自多属性任务组II (Santiago-Espada et al. 2011)的两个子任务时,该研究在保持其他影响不变的情况下,调查了应用努力对MATB-II绩效指标的影响。两组参与者分别完成了matb - ii衍生子任务的简单和困难试验。如果实验组的参与者取得了足够高的成绩,就会得到额外的奖励。在简单和困难的试验中,治疗组的表现都比对照组好不到4%,这提示了本研究中应用努力的效果大小。测量或控制应用的工作量可以通过减少作为误差捕获的可变性的数量来提高研究人员确定干预措施对工作量度量的影响的能力。