A Longitudinal Simulator Study to Explore Drivers' Behaviour During Highly-Automated Driving

被引:16
作者
Large, David R. [1 ]
Burnett, Gary [1 ]
Morris, Andrew [2 ]
Muthumani, Arun [2 ]
Matthias, Rebecca [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nottingham, Human Factors Res Grp, Nottingham, England
[2] Loughborough Univ, Loughborough Design Sch, Loughborough, Leics, England
[3] Univ Warwick, Int Digital Lab, Jaguar Land Rover Res, Coventry, W Midlands, England
来源
ADVANCES IN HUMAN ASPECTS OF TRANSPORTATION | 2018年 / 597卷
关键词
Highly-automated driving; Driving simulator; Trust; Situation awareness; Secondary tasks; Transfer of control; SITUATION AWARENESS; WORKLOAD; TRUST;
D O I
10.1007/978-3-319-60441-1_57
中图分类号
U [交通运输];
学科分类号
08 ; 0823 ;
摘要
Six experienced drivers each undertook five 30-min journeys (portrayed as 'daily commutes' i.e. one on each of five consecutive weekdays) in a medium-fidelity driving-simulator engineered to mimic a highly-automated vehicle. Participants were encouraged to act as they might in such a vehicle by bringing with them their own objects/devices to use. During periods of automation, participants were quickly engrossed by their chosen activities, many of which had strong visual, manual and cognitive elements, and required postural adaptation (e.g. moving/reclining the driver's seat); the steering wheel was typically used to support objects/devices. Consistently high subjective ratings of trust suggest that drivers were unperturbed by the novelty of highly-automated driving and generally willing to allow the vehicle to assume control; ratings of situational awareness varied considerably indicating mixed opinions. Qualitative results are discussed in the context of the re-design of vehicles to enable safe and comfortable engagement with secondary activities during high-automation.
引用
收藏
页码:583 / 594
页数:12
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