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Developing Adaptive Information Presentation for Spaceflight Crews and Ground Support for Human Spaceflight Beyond Low Earth Orbit
DescriptionAs human spaceflight missions advance from low Earth orbit to the Moon and Mars, new requirements and operations concepts are necessary for information presentation, knowledge sharing, and task communication strategies between mission support teams and space-based crews. This research evaluates current communication and task scheduling tools used on the International Space Station and NASA’s Mission Control Center in Houston to investigate how adaptive information presentations can support Lunar and Martian mission contexts. Adaptive information displays have the potential to aid in decision-action policy trades constrained by environment-based factors such as time delays, communication bandwidth capabilities, and communication outages as well as team performance factors such as limited resource availability, expertise, and shared situational awareness between the dispersed teams. Key features of the adaptive information displays are the type of time delay display and the scale of time delay depending on the information required for a task, time-sensitivity, and state uncertainties.
Event Type
Industry/Practitioner Case Study
Lecture
TimeWednesday, September 11th8:50am - 9:10am MST
LocationFLW Salon A
Tracks
Aerospace Systems
Usability and System Evaluation