OPTIC FLOW AND VISUAL ANALYSIS OF THE BASE-TO-FINAL TURN

Citation
Ac. Beall et Jm. Loomis, OPTIC FLOW AND VISUAL ANALYSIS OF THE BASE-TO-FINAL TURN, The International journal of aviation psychology, 7(3), 1997, pp. 201-223
Citations number
39
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology, Applied
ISSN journal
10508414
Volume
7
Issue
3
Year of publication
1997
Pages
201 - 223
Database
ISI
SICI code
1050-8414(1997)7:3<201:OFAVAO>2.0.ZU;2-#
Abstract
In the spirit of other optic flow research, we address the problem of how a pilot turns an airplane into alignment with a runway, a maneuver that is one of the more challenging phases of visually controlled fli ght. In earlier work, Loomis and Beall (1992) proposed a rule for turn ing an aircraft into alignment: Turn the aircraft in such a way as to hold constant the rate of change of splay (the angle the projected run way makes with respect to the vertical). The experiment presented in t his article was a psychophysical test of this rule. We compared day an d night landing approaches as our experimental manipulation; we were i nterested in any role that ground texture might play in the spatial ju dgment involved in performing the landing approach. Three pilots varyi ng in flight experience performed multiple approaches in a light aircr aft for a total of 26 day and 25 night approaches. The three-dimension al trajectories of the aircraft were measured using differential globa l positioning system data. From these trajectories we computed a varie ty of motion variables (e.g., turn rate) and two optic flow variables (splay and splay rate). The similar performance of day and night appro aches suggests that the pilots were using optic flow variables that we re invariant with changes in the visibility of ground texture. A compu ter model was developed based on the optic flow rule and estimates of human visual processing thresholds. We conclude that the model gives a good description of pilot performance as tested in our experiment and may help to illuminate the cause of a class of airplane accidents dur ing the common landing phase.