J. Edward Swan II

Evaluating System Capabilities and User Performance in the Battlefield Augmented Reality System

Mark A. Livingston, J. Edward Swan II, Simon J. Julier, Yohan Baillot, Dennis Brown, Lawrence J. Rosenblum, Joseph L. Gabbard, Tobias H. Höllerer, and Deborah Hix. Evaluating System Capabilities and User Performance in the Battlefield Augmented Reality System. In Performance Metrics for Intelligent Systems Workshop (PerMIS '04), August 2004.

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Abstract

We describe a first experiment in evaluating the system capabilities of the Battlefield Augmented Reality System, an interactive system designed to present military information to dismounted warfighters. We describe not just the current experiment, but a methodology of both system evaluation and user performance measurement in the system, and show how both types of tests will be useful in system development. We summarize results in a perceptual experiment being used to inform system design, and discuss ongoing and future experiments to which the work described herein leads.

BibTeX

@InProceedings{PERMIS04-bars, 
  author =      {Mark A. Livingston and J. Edward {Swan~II} and Simon J. Julier 
                 and Yohan Baillot and Dennis Brown and Lawrence J. Rosenblum and 
                 Joseph L. Gabbard and Tobias H. H\"{o}llerer and Deborah Hix}, 
  title =       {Evaluating System Capabilities and User Performance in the 
                 Battlefield Augmented Reality System}, 
  booktitle =   {Performance Metrics for Intelligent Systems Workshop (PerMIS '04)}, 
  location =    {Gaithersburg, Maryland, USA}, 
  date =        {August 24--26}, 
  month =       {August}, 
  year =        2004, 
  abstract =    { 
We describe a first experiment in evaluating the system capabilities of the 
Battlefield Augmented Reality System, an interactive system designed to 
present military information to dismounted warfighters.  We describe not 
just the current experiment, but a methodology of both system evaluation and 
user performance measurement in the system, and show how both types of tests 
will be useful in system development.  We summarize results in a perceptual 
experiment being used to inform system design, and discuss ongoing and 
future experiments to which the work described herein leads. 
}, 
}