Managing the unexpected: Operator behavioural data and its value in predicting correct alarm responses
Chidera W. Amazu, Joseph Mietkiewicz, Ammar N. Abbas, Gabriele Baldissone, Davide Fissore, Micaela Demichela, Anders L. Madsen, Maria Chiara Leva

TL;DR
This study explores how real-time process and interaction data from control room operators can predict alarm response outcomes, offering a non-intrusive way to enhance safety and decision-making in critical scenarios.
Contribution
It demonstrates the potential of using existing process logs and operator-system interaction data to predict operator responses without intrusive physiological measurements.
Findings
Identified predictive behavioral metrics for alarm response
Compared different experimental configurations for operator performance
Developed models to forecast operator response outcomes
Abstract
Data from psychophysiological measures can offer new insight into control room operators' behaviour, cognition, and mental workload status. This can be particularly helpful when combined with appraisal of capacity to respond to possible critical plant conditions (i.e. critical alarms response scenarios). However, wearable physiological measurement tools such as eye tracking and EEG caps can be perceived as intrusive and not suitable for usage in daily operations. Therefore, this article examines the potential of using real-time data from process and operator-system interactions during abnormal scenarios that can be recorded and retrieved from the distributed control system's historian or process log, and their capacity to provide insight into operator behavior and predict their response outcomes, without intruding on daily tasks. Data for this study were obtained from a design of…
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