An Approach to Prediction of Mental Resilience in Fighter Pilot
Selection
Krešimir Ćosić
a
, Siniša Popović
b
, Marko Šarlija
c
, Ivan Kesedžić
d
and Mate Gambiraža
e
University of Zagreb Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing, Unska 3, Zagreb, Croatia
Keywords: Prediction, Mental Resilience, Stress Resilience, Cognitive Resilience, Fatigue Resilience, Fighter Pilot,
Selection, Monitoring, Physiological Features, fNIRS Features, Oculometric Features.
Abstract: It is well known that human factors are associated with a substantial number of military aviation accidents.
To avoid such catastrophic events, continuous enhancement of pilot selection processes using state-of-the-art
scientific research results is needed since traditionally used self-report paper-and-pencil personality measures
are highly prone to self-report bias. Based on our multidisciplinary research on stress, cognitive and fatigue
resilience, we propose an approach for prediction of mental resilience which is based on: stress resilience
features, like startle reactivity, respiratory sinus arrhythmia, cardiac allostasis; cognitive resilience features
related to cognitive workload/overload, situational awareness, cognitive appraisal etc.; and fatigue resilience
features, like dynamics of saccades, eye blink rates etc. These clusters of features mainly reflect interactions
among all human brain regions, and their multimodal fusion may enhance assessment of pilots’ mental
resilience and combat readiness.
1 INTRODUCTION
It is well known that human factors are associated
with a substantial number of military aviation
accidents (de Hoyos, 2019). To avoid such
catastrophic events, continuous enhancement of pilot
selection processes using state-of-the-art scientific
research results is needed since traditionally used
self-report paper-and-pencil personality measures are
highly prone to self-report bias (Birkeland et al.,
2006). More objective and reliable selection
processes can also minimize drop-out rates among
pilot candidates in later and more expensive stages of
training process. Therefore, selection procedures for
military pilots deserve more attention as new
scientific results become available (Broach et al.,
2019). Unfortunately, scientific literature is
remarkably scarce in addressing these crucial aspects
of selection process, despite declaratively
acknowledging the importance of stress resilience,
stress tolerance and stress coping skills for future
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6356-743X
b
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6026-9261
c
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7130-9529
d
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8052-0599
e
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7669-3929
fighter pilots. Empirical support regarding the role of
personality in pilot performance is lacking, and
further improvements in the pilot selection
procedures are expected (Carretta, 2000). Despite the
relatively low predictive validity of personality
assessment instruments (Broach et al., 2019), specific
personality characteristics closely related to stress
resilience were shown to play a significant role in
mission success in military or other dangerous
occupations (Wood et al., 2015).
The features concerning stress and cognitive
resilience, which may have long-term impact on
future pilot’s task performance are neglected in the
pilot’s selection process (Grassmann et al., 2017).
Furthermore, some research recognizes individual
differences in stress and cognitive resilience features
as an important factor that has short-term and
potentially long-term effects on individual task
performance (Staal et al., 2008; Šarlija et al., 2021;
Vine et al., 2015). Therefore, the value of
objectivized assessment of stress and cognitive
Ä ˛Eosi
´
c, K., Popovi
´
c, S., Šarlija, M., Kesedži
´
c, I. and Gambiraža, M.
An Approach to Prediction of Mental Resilience in Fighter Pilot Selection.
DOI: 10.5220/0011963800003622
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Cognitive Aircraft Systems (ICCAS 2022), pages 83-87
ISBN: 978-989-758-657-6
Copyright
c
2023 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. Under CC license (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
83
resilience in the early phases of pilot selection is not
yet sufficiently recognized. In our recent project and
articles, we have addressed the challenging problem
of stress resilience prediction (Ćosić et al., 2019a;
Ćosić et al., 2019b; Ćosić et al., 2019c; Šarlija et al.,
2021), as well as cognitive resilience (Kesedžić et al.,
2020). Mental resilience in this paper considers stress
and cognitive resilience, as well as influence of
fatigue on successful operations in military and
civilian stressful and unpredictable environments.
Therefore, prediction of mental resilience in the
context of military pilot selection deserves particular
attention. Based on our multidisciplinary research on
stress, cognitive and fatigue resilience, we propose an
approach for prediction of mental resilience which is
based on: stress resilience features, like startle
reactivity, respiratory sinus arrhythmia, cardiac
allostasis; cognitive resilience features related to
cognitive workload/overload, situational awareness,
cognitive appraisal etc.; and fatigue resilience
features, like dynamics of saccades, eye blink rates
etc. These clusters of features mainly reflect
interactions among all human brain regions, and their
multimodal fusion may enhance assessment of pilots’
mental resilience and combat readiness.
2 PREDICTION OF STRESS
RESILIENCE BY
PHYSIOLOGICAL FEATURES
Stress resilience represents a complex biological,
cognitive, emotional, and behavioural phenomenon,
which can be broadly defined, in the context of a
human psychological trait, as the ability of positive
adjustment to adverse events (Russo et al. 2012,
Ćosić et al., 2019a; Ćosić et al., 2019b). Besides
being a protective factor against the development of
stress-related psychopathology (Walker et al., 2017),
resilience is also defined in a task-related context as
the ability of maintaining normal psychological and
physical functioning, when exposed to extraordinary
levels of stress (Russo et al., 2012; Šarlija et al.,
2021). The latter is crucial in the context of highly
demanding, safety-critical and stressful professions,
such as military fighter jet pilots. In addition to the
well-known psychometric self-report tools, stress
resilience assessment can be objectivized by means
of: (1) various metrics that might allow a deep and
accurate insight into the biological factors
contributing to the candidates’ stress resilience (e.g.
brain imaging, fear conditioning, gene analysis, etc.);
and (2) various features based on the analysis of
objectively measurable responses of the peripheral
physiological signals. Due to the cost- and time-
ineffective nature of the first group of metrics, the
latter has been the focus of our most recent research
(Ćosić et al., 2019a; Ćosić et al., 2019b; Šarlija et al.,
2021).
Prediction of stress resilience based on
physiological features includes the analysis of
peripheral physiological signals, such as
electrocardiography, electrodermal activity,
respiration, and orbicularis oculi electromyography
of eyeblink intensity. Experimental protocols for
elicitation, acquisition and analysis of these signals
are related to: (a) resting autonomic functioning; (b)
the startle reflex; and (c) psychobiological allostasis
(Šarlija et al., 2021). Some of the most prominent
specific physiological features for objectivization of
stress resilience assessment, which have confirmed
discriminative power between an a-priori more
resilient and an a-priori less resilient group of
participants, include: respiratory sinus arrhythmia,
which measures heart rate variability in phase with
inhalation and exhalation; startle reactivity, which
measures the strength of reflexive defensive
responding to an aversive unconditioned stimulus,
i.e., abrupt, loud noise; cardiac allostasis, which
measures adaptive reaction to a stressful event,
involving a vigorous cardiac response to stress
coupled with a significant cardiac recovery in the
aftermath (Ćosić et al., 2019a; Ćosić et al., 2019b).
Our recent work proposes a more comprehensive
set of stress resilience features and application of
machine learning models for prediction of task
performance under stress (Šarlija et al., 2021). The
proposed approach could be used in prediction of
performance envelope limits in realistic stressful
occupational settings, such as the military flight
simulator.
3 PREDICTION OF COGNITIVE
RESILIENCE BY FNIRS
FEATURES
Cognitive resilience is the ability to overcome
negative effects of stress on cognitive functioning
(LaRosa, 2017) and depends on individuals’
cognitive appraisal, cognitive skills, as well as neural
interconnectivity, particularly between limbic and
prefrontal brain structures (Arnsten, 2009). Various
mental states are known to impair cognitive
performance and can jeopardize flight safety, such as
cognitive fatigue (Dehais et al., 2018), cognitive
ICCAS 2022 - International Conference on Cognitive Aircraft Systems
84
decline and overload. An important factor in pilot
selection process is the evaluation of applicants’
cognitive abilities, mostly estimated using a
computerized test battery, which have high validity,
and low cost (Broach et al., 2019). However, new
methods in cognitive load estimation using objective
neurophysiological measures can be added to these
procedures.
Functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS)
signals have shown correlations between prefrontal
cortex activation and performance on cognitive tasks,
and can be used in prediction of pilots’ mental states
in mitigation of human error (Verdière et al., 2018),
as well as in cognitive load classification (Kesedžić et
al., 2020). The continuous cognitive load estimation
is of special interest in safety-critical professions,
since the excessive or insufficient cognitive load is
associated with decreased task efficiency (Derosière
et al., 2013). Therefore, the prediction of cognitive
resilience is of particular importance in fighter pilot
selection processes since impairments in cognitive
resilience affect pilot’s performance in stressful
conditions. Consequently, there is a growing interest
in development and implementation of various tools
and means for monitoring and prediction of pilot
cognitive performance (Dehais et al., 2018).
Specific cognitive tasks and corresponding
neurophysiological measures which are already used
in aviation research (Verdière et al. 2018; Dehais et
al., 2018), allow the prediction of cognitive resilience.
Experimental measurements concerning the
prediction of cognitive resilience may include generic
cognitive tests, like working memory tests, arithmetic
tests, n-back tests, and a variety of performance tests
on flight simulators in the later phases of pilot
training. Using comprehensive correlation analysis
and machine learning on multimodal stimuli and
corresponding fNIRS features datasets, assessment
and prediction of pilots’ limits concerning cognitive
load/overload, task performance, attention and
fatigue, as well as lack of situational awareness can
be achieved. fNIRS features include classical
oxygenation features, like signal average, peak,
variance, skewness, kurtosis, area under the curve,
slope, etc., extracted from different prefrontal cortex
regions. These features were already used in research
of cognitive skills such as working memory (Fishburn
et al., 2014), fatigue (Skau et al., 2019), cognitive
flexibility (Kalia et al., 2018), mental workload
(Aghajani et al., 2017), as well as cognitive load
(Kesedžić et al., 2020).
4 PREDICTION OF FATIGUE
RESILIENCE BY
OCULOMETRIC FEATURES
Most accidents in aviation are caused by human error,
which is a result of impaired mental performance. In
terms of the air force and selection of fighter pilots,
oculometric features have shown to be useful for
detecting fatigue or high-workload conditions, as well
as, for investigating motion sickness, hypoxia, and
expertise. Fatigue increases the risk of impaired
performance causing accidents in fighter pilots, and it
is of high importance to select resilient individuals to
prevent possible catastrophic outcomes. Human
performance can be predicted using different
oculometric features related to fixations, saccadic
movements, pupillary response, and eye blinking
(Martinez-Marquez et al., 2021).
Fixation-related features are associated with
visual processing and fatigue. Feature such as fixation
duration is a predictor of fatigue development, and
longer fixation duration indicates increased fatigue
(Zargari Marandi et al., 2018). Saccades-related
features such as saccade velocity, saccadic length,
saccade rate, and the number of saccades are
associated with mental workload, lethargy, and
fatigue, and can be used for prediction of fatigue
resilience. Furthermore, pupil size features are
influenced by emotions, muscular fatigue, as well as
cognitive workload (Gambiraža et al., 2021). The
most common blink-related feature is blink rate,
which is associated with stress, fatigue, task demands,
attention, tension etc.
Eye tracking could also predict pilot’s overall
mental resilience based on features of gaze pattern
dynamics, which can be computed in response to a
variety of visual tasks, like antisaccade, free-viewing,
smooth pursuit tasks, etc. Evaluating pilot’s
oculometric performance on such tasks would
separate those candidates who develop fatigue sooner
from those who develop it later, i.e., from those who
are more fatigue resilient. We have also developed
and optimized general stimulation paradigms for
elicitation of facial and eye gaze features for overall
mental resilience prediction (Ćosić et al., 2019b).
5 CONCLUSION
Prediction of future fighter pilots’ stress, cognitive
and fatigue resilience proposed in this paper is
particularly important due to self-report bias of
standardized psychological instruments in selection
An Approach to Prediction of Mental Resilience in Fighter Pilot Selection
85
process for attractive high-value jobs (Galić et al.,
2012). These multimodal neurophysiological
measurements and analyses have been successfully
applied in selection processes for air traffic
controllers in Croatia (Ćosić et al., 2019b) and we do
believe that similar approach can be successfully
applied in future fighter pilot selection processes. The
2020 report of the National Commission for Military
Aviation Safety to the U.S. President and Congress
(NCMAS, 2020 Dec 1), as well as Croatian military
aviation accidents (Croatia Week, 2014 Aug 6;
Defense Brief, 2020 Jan 27, 2020 May 7;
FlightGlobal, 2010 Sep 24; Reuters 2007 Jul 9), stress
importance of human factors in military aviation.
Therefore, the main objective of this paper is to
stimulate discussions within broader international
military research community to enhance future pilot
monitoring processes across their professional
lifecycle based on innovative neuro-psycho-
physiological assessments, particularly here in
Croatia regarding upcoming Rafale F3-R jet fighters.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We acknowledge the support of the state Agency
Alan to present this paper at the ICCAS 2022
conference.
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