Evaluation of Man-computer Input Techniques for Military Information Systems

Evaluation of Man-computer Input Techniques for Military Information Systems

Author: Michael H. Strub

Publisher:

Published: 1971

Total Pages: 48

ISBN-13:

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The publication describes the evaluation, in terms of speed and accuracy, of four configurations of procedures for inputting information into a semi-automated information processing system. Sixty USMA Prep School enlisted men were given an experimental task requiring each to translate 35 free-text messages into computer-acceptable terminology. Accuracy and speed of two input procedures were each compared under two conditions of verification. In one procedure, the subjects translated the incoming message onto a paper format before transcribing on a CRT screen (off-line). In the other procedure, the message was transcribed directly on the CRT screen (on-line). In the unverified condition, one man performed the input operation without error check; in the verified condition, two men translated the same message, compared their translations, and resolved differences before entering the information into the data base. Performance results under the four experimental conditions were also compared with a similar 7th Army TOS procedure in which a message is translated onto a paper format and the unverified message is copied on the CRT screen by the UIOD (user input-output device) operator.


NASA SP-7500

NASA SP-7500

Author: United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Publisher:

Published: 1973

Total Pages: 156

ISBN-13:

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Military Strategy and Tactics

Military Strategy and Tactics

Author: Reiner Huber

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2013-11-11

Total Pages: 350

ISBN-13: 1475709587

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This volume brings forth a set of selected papers from the Conference on Modeling Land Sattle Systems for Military Planning. Sponsored by the Special Programme Panel on Systems Science of the NATO Science Committee, the conference took place in Ottobrunn, Germany, at the War Gaming Centre of Industrieanlagen-Betriebsgesellschaft. The idea to organize a conference on land battle systemmodelswas first suggested to me in 1g72 by Andreas Mortensen, then a member of the Norwegian Defence Research Establishment and presently at the SHAPE Technical Centre, when we discussed the apparent inconsistencies of various evaluations of force capability within NATO. Frequently, decision makers are confronted by contradictory results of different studies addressing essentially the same problern leaving them with the impression that the tools of systems analysis and operations research may not be very objective guides. However, experienced systems researchers know that a detailed comparison of models, their assumptions and inputs, would generally show that results are not really contradictory. But not only seem the decision processes in large national and international organizations tobe suchthat a comparison can hardly ever be accomplished, also the docu mentation available is rarely sufficient to really camprehend the differences in results. For these reasons, we felt that an effort to review the state of the art of model ing in support of force capabil ity assessments was overdue.