Bridging the Gap Between Modern UX Design and Particle Accelerator Control Room Interfaces
Rachael Hill (1), Casey Kovesdi (1), Torrey Mortenson (1), Madelyn Polzin (2), Zachary Spielman (1), and Katya Le Blanc (1) ((1) Idaho National Laboratory, (2) Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory)

TL;DR
This paper advocates integrating modern human-centered design principles into complex accelerator control room interfaces to improve usability, safety, and operator performance, supported by case studies from Fermilab.
Contribution
It introduces a framework for applying human-centered design to accelerator HSIs, bridging traditional control systems with modern UX standards.
Findings
Enhanced operator performance and reduced errors
Interfaces remain intuitive across system complexities
Improved collaboration among diverse user roles
Abstract
Accelerator control systems often represent relatively complex and safety-sensitive human-machine interfaces within process control industries. These systems are technically robust and reflect the cumulative integration of solutions built and adapted across decades. One of the regular, unfortunate casualties of provisional accelerator control system updates is their human-system interfaces (HSIs) which often lag behind modern usability and design standards. An additional challenge is that although there is a multitude of established human factors (HF), and user experience (UX) principles for everyday digital applications, there are very few (if any) established principles for complex and safety-critical applications for an accelerator. This paper argues for the importance of established HF and UX principles (herein referred to as human-centered design principles) into the development of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman-Automation Interaction and Safety · Risk and Safety Analysis · Safety Warnings and Signage
