Samson Palmer
Papers
1
Total Citations
2
H-Index
1
About
Dr. Samson Palmer is a pioneering researcher at the intersection of human-autonomy teaming, neuroergonomics, and military decision support systems. His work fundamentally reimagines how humans and autonomous systems collaborate in high-stakes environments, with a particular focus on trust dynamics and neural correlates of human-machine interaction. Palmer's most influential contribution, "Human-Autonomy Teaming in the Battlespace: Trust and The Role of Neuroimaging" (2024), has garnered 2 citations and introduces a groundbreaking framework for integrating neuroimaging techniques into battlefield human-autonomy teams. This work challenges conventional paradigms by demonstrating that real-time neural data can predict and calibrate operator trust in autonomous systems, potentially revolutionizing how robotic and autonomous systems (RAS) are deployed in defense contexts. Palmer's research bridges cognitive neuroscience and military robotics, offering empirical evidence that neuroadaptive interfaces can enhance team performance and safety. His interdisciplinary approach—combining experimental neuroimaging with human factors engineering—positions him as a leading voice in the ethical and practical deployment of intelligent decision support systems. Palmer's work is essential reading for researchers in human-robot interaction, defense technology, and cognitive engineering, providing both theoretical foundations and actionable insights for designing trustworthy, adaptive autonomous systems in complex operational environments.
Research Focus
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Top Papers
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