Michael B. Dillard, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | 2012 | Psychology | The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL |
Area:
Experimental PsychologyGoogle:
"Michael Dillard"Mean distance: 53433
Parents
Sign in to add mentorDavid B. Boles | grad student | 2012 | University of Alabama | |
(Transfer of training and the role of mental workload in expert performance.) |
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Publications
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Dillard MB, Warm JS, Funke GJ, et al. (2018) Vigilance Tasks: Unpleasant, Mentally Demanding, and Stressful Even When Time Flies. Human Factors. 18720818796015 |
Funke GJ, Warm JS, Baldwin CL, et al. (2016) The Independence and Interdependence of Coacting Observers in Regard to Performance Efficiency, Workload, and Stress in a Vigilance Task. Human Factors |
Boles DB, Dillard MB. (2015) The measurement of perceptual resources and workload The Cambridge Handbook of Applied Perception Research. 39-59 |
Dillard MB, Warm JS, Funke GJ, et al. (2014) The sustained attention to response task (SART) does not promote mindlessness during vigilance performance. Human Factors. 56: 1364-79 |
Shaw TH, Funke ME, Dillard M, et al. (2013) Event-related cerebral hemodynamics reveal target-specific resource allocation for both "go" and "no-go" response-based vigilance tasks. Brain and Cognition. 82: 265-73 |
Dillard MB, Boles DB, Black SR. (2012) Bidirectional resource training of simple and complex tasks Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society. 2462-2466 |
Funke G, Funke M, Dillard M, et al. (2012) Cerebral hemovelocity and the Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART) Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society. 1436-1440 |
Dillard MB, Boles DB. (2009) Interference between visuospatial dual tasks and the effects of training Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society. 3: 1888-1892 |