Since 2003, the NASA Ames Research Center has been actively involved in researching and advancing the state-of-the-art of planning and scheduling tools for NASA mission operations. Our planning toolkit SPIFe (Scheduling and Planning Interface for Exploration) has supported a variety of missions and field tests, scheduling activities for Mars rovers as well as crew on-board International Space Station and NASA earth analogs. The scheduled plan is the integration of all the activities for the day/s. In turn, the agents (rovers, landers, spaceships, crew) execute from this schedule while the mission support team members (e.g., flight controllers) follow the schedule during execution. Over the last couple of years, our team has begun to research and validate methods that will better support users during realtime operations and execution of scheduled activities. Our team utilizes human-computer interaction principles to research user needs, identify workflow processes, prototype software aids, and user test these. This paper discusses three specific prototypes developed and user tested to support real-time operations: Score Mobile, Playbook, and Mobile Assistant for Task Execution (MATE).
Supporting Real-Time Operations and Execution through Timeline and Scheduling Aids
AIAA International Conference on Environmental Systems ; 2013 ; Vail, CO, United States
2013-07-14
Aufsatz (Konferenz)
Keine Angabe
Englisch
SUPPORTING REAL-TIME OPERATIONS AND EXECUTION THROUGH TIMELINE AND SCHEDULING AIDS
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2013
|Timeline-based Mission Operations Architecture
AIAA | 2012
|Timeline as Unifying Concept for Spacecraft Operations
AIAA | 2013
|