Cognitive Aging as a Human Factor: Effects of Age on Human Performance

被引:3
作者
Hall, Anna [1 ]
Boring, Ronald L. [1 ]
Miyake, Tina M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Idaho Natl Lab, Human Factors & Reliabil Dept, 2525 Fremt Ave, Idaho Falls, ID 83415 USA
关键词
Developmental cognition; human aging; reactor operators; control room; LEARNING SERIAL PATTERNS; OLDER DRIVERS; LIFE-SPAN; CONTROL ROOM; INTERFACE DESIGN; SELF-REGULATION; EXPERTISE; SYSTEM; MEMORY; INTELLIGENCE;
D O I
10.1080/00295450.2022.2073951
中图分类号
TL [原子能技术]; O571 [原子核物理学];
学科分类号
0827 ; 082701 ;
摘要
Nuclear power plant (NPP) control room operators must make ongoing computations and decisions that maximize production and ensure safety, which places a high cognitive burden on the operators. How cognitions such as attention, visuospatial ability, and working memory interact with socio-technical systems to achieve optimal operations is well studied. However, there is an absence of research that examines how cognitive functioning within the NPP control room environment is moderated by developmental aging processes. This is of critical importance because different types of cognitive actions are known to develop and peak at different times across the adult life span, and it is becoming increasingly clear that there is no age at which all cognitive faculties operate at maximum capacity. Thus, given that NPPs are experiencing an aging workforce, it is vital to identify how mission-critical cognitions change with age. This paper reviews implications of aging on reactor operators in the current and new fleet. We highlight lessons that can be learned from state-of-the-art human factors research that considers aging, lessons from the large cognitive aging literature, and lessons from aging workers in other industries that use sophisticated socio-technical systems, such as aviation. We also consider the important subject of aging effects versus expertise and present preliminary data that support the premise that age of operator is linked to effective and efficient operations but that this relationship may be moderated by level of operations expertise. Finally, we apply these lessons to future considerations for aging research in current nuclear operations and with the advent of advanced modernized control rooms.
引用
收藏
页码:261 / 275
页数:15
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