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- W2054027252 abstract "Trust has, since the early stages of IBM's Autonomic Computing (AC) initiative, been recognized as an important factor in the success of new autonomic features. If operators do not the new automated tools, they will not use them -- no matter how useful or efficient they might be. Despite this stated awareness of as a major contributing factor to successful operator adoption of AC functionality (e.g., [11]), no clear process of explicitly designing for operator has emerged. The purpose of our research is to develop such a process, to provide a theoretically grounded method for designing for in automation. We define appropriate trust as it is described in [6]. By this definition, there are two components to trust. The first is proper calibration of trust, meaning that the operator trusts the automation to the degree of its capability, without over-trust or distrust. The second component is resolution of trust: the operator must be sensitive to different or changing conditions (functional or temporal) that might affect the ability of the automation to achieve the operator's goals.In our research, we have drawn on the extensive review of literature by Lee and See [6], who investigated the concept of as published from multiple perspectives (e.g., organizational, psychological, and interpersonal). Lee and See have developed a model of in automation, based on their review of the literature, which describes the feedback loops that inform one's attitude of (or distrust) towards automation. Furthermore, Lee and See identify a continuum of attributional abstraction - information based on which an operator may attribute a sense of in an automated tool. Three categories along this continuum are defined: purpose-, process-, and performance-related information are described as being necessary to achieving trust.Although they provide these categories of information, Lee and See [6] do not provide a process by which the information might be identified for a given automated tool. We hypothesized that Work Domain Analysis (WDA; [12]) might serve to provide a clear and definite list. WDA is part of a multi-stage analytic framework, developed for the analysis of complex socio-technical systems. It is a constraint-based, formative analysis, which describes the realm of possible actions, rather than a single prescribed path. The WDA, we reasoned, could be adapted and applied to the problem of design for in automation.In this paper, we will introduce the model of in automation described by [6]. We will also introduce WDA. We will then describe how this analysis can be applied to the question of in automation. Finally, we will present a case study from new automation in the IBM® DB2® Version 9.1 for Linux®, UNIX®, and Windows® product (DB2 V9.1), in which we applied WDA to identify specific information requirements for in the Self-Tuning Memory Manager, and used these findings to impact documentation and logging for this new automated functionality." @default.
- W2054027252 created "2016-06-24" @default.
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- W2054027252 date "2006-01-01" @default.
- W2054027252 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W2054027252 title "Trust by design" @default.
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- W2054027252 doi "https://doi.org/10.1145/1188966.1188978" @default.
- W2054027252 hasPublicationYear "2006" @default.
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