Venue & date: Thursday 30th January at 4pm in K103 (Kimmeridge House)
Situation awareness can be loosely defined as, ‘knowing what’s going on around you and what to do about it.’ In everyday life we make complex decisions – some good, some bad – on the basis of our awareness of what is going on around us. Sadly situation awareness can sometimes be sub-optimal leading to catastrophic errors such as road traffic accidents and air crashes. Such errors often appear to result from a ‘tunnelling down’ with available and useful information being ignored. This attentional tunnelling is widely reported by (amongst others) firefighters, medical staff and military personnel.
Dr Graham Edgar from the Centre for Research in Applied Cognition, Knowledge, Learning and Emotion at the University of Gloucestershire will present his research examining information-use in building and maintaining situation awareness, and the influence that affective state has on that process.
All are welcome and there is no need to book – just come along!












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