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NASA NTRS · Conference Paper

Assessment of simulation fidelity using measurements of piloting technique in flight

Published 2017-09-30 From Legacy CDMS 3 authors

Attribution

This is the abstract and citation. Full text lives at NASA NTRS — we link out rather than host. All credit to the authors and Legacy CDMS.

Abstract

Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.

The U.S. Army and NASA joined together on a project to conduct a systematic investigation and validation of a ground based piloted simulation of the Army/Sikorsky UH-60A helicopter. Flight testing was an integral part of the validation effort. Nap-of-the-Earth (NOE) piloting tasks which were investigated included the bob-up, the hover turn, the dash/quickstop, the sidestep, the dolphin, and the slalom. Results from the simulation indicate that the pilot's NOE task performance in the simulator is noticeably and quantifiably degraded when compared with the task performance results generated in flight test. The results of the flight test and ground based simulation experiments support a unique rationale for the assessment of simulation fidelity: flight simulation fidelity should be judged quantitatively by measuring pilot's control strategy and technique as induced by the simulator. A quantitative comparison is offered between the piloting technique observed in a flight simulator and that observed in flight test for the same tasks performed by the same pilots.

Authors

  • Clement, W. F. Systems Technology, Inc., Mountain View
  • Cleveland, W. B. NASA Ames Research Center
  • Key, D. L. NASA Ames Research Center

Citation: Clement, W. F., Cleveland, W. B., Key, D. L. (2017). Assessment of simulation fidelity using measurements of piloting technique in flight. Legacy CDMS. NASA NTRS ID 19850008508. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/19850008508 ↗