“…Traditionally, human-automation interaction has been studied under a supervisory control framework, akin to a master-slave relationship (de Visser, Shaw, Mohamed-Ameen, & Parasuraman, 2010;Dzindolet, Pierce, Beck, Dawe, & Anderson, 2001;Muir, 1994;Muir & Moray, 1996;Satterfield, Ramirez, Shaw, & Parasuraman, 2012). However, research has shown that these supervisory control structures can potentially amplify cognitive demands on human operators as they struggle to integrate multiple information sources (Cosenzo, Parasuraman, & de Visser, 2010;Cummings & Mitchell, 2008;Shaw et al, 2010;Woods, Patterson, & Roth, 2002). Technological advances have allowed us to overcome the limitations associated with "automation-as-a-tool" control strategies and shift toward the use of autonomous, self-governing systems.…”