DO IN-VEHICLE ADVANCE SIGNS BENEFIT OLDER AND YOUNGER DRIVER INTERSECTION PERFORMANCE? Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Driving skill is measurably impaired by text-messaging. Writing text messages creates a significantly greater impairment than reading text messages, but.
Advertisements

LOGO Older people’s driving habits, visual abilities, and subjective assessment of daily visual functioning Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
Eye Movements Study on Reading Behaviors of Automobile Advertisements Published in Mobile Phone Newspaper Zheng Yuan Min Zhang Qing Tang.
Study of Change Blindness EEG Synchronization using Wavelet Coherence Analysis Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
Driver response to a disabled pedestrian using a dangerous crosswalk Journal of Environmental Psychology (1992) 12, W. Andrew Harrell 學生:董瑩蟬.
LOGO Relative effects of age and compromised vision on driving performance Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
Neurodriving Behavioral and structural brain imaging data.
Eye Movements of Younger and Older Drivers Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
OLDER AND YOUNGER DRIVER PERFORMANCE AT COMPLEX INTERSECTIONS: IMPLICATIONS FOR USING PERCEPTION- RESPONSE TIME AND DRIVING SIMULATION Professor: Liu Student:
LOGO The role of attentional breadth in perceptual change detection Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
Assessment/Enhancement of Cognitive Ability in Older Adults Karlene Ball Center for Research on Applied Gerontology University of Alabama at Birmingham.
Drinking and Driving. Video Discussion What were some of your thoughts as you watched the video about these real drinking and driving accidents?
Effects of uncertainty, transmission type, driver age and gender on brake reaction and movement time Professor: Liu Students: Ruby.
Effects of experience and processing demands on visual information acquisition in drivers Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
Elderly pedestrian issues Student :董瑩蟬. Purpose This paper main investigated that some factor effect the pedestrian on the road crossing behavior. To.
International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics 35 (2005) 939–953 Situation awareness and workload in driving while using adaptive cruise control and a.
Safety Benefits of a Traffic Signal Designed for the Color Deficient Devoted to adding reason and knowledge to public policy ScienceServingSociety.com.
Mobile Phone Use in a Driving Simulation Task: Differences in Eye Movements Stacy Balk, Kristin Moore, Will Spearman, & Jay Steele.
The Effects of Text Messaging On the Driving Performance of Young Novice Drivers MUARC: Kristie Young, Simon Hosking & Michael Regan NRMA Motoring & Services:
Older drivers fail in intersections: speed discrepancies between older and younger male drivers 學生:董瑩蟬.
Company Logo Age, cognitive style, and traffic signs Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
The guessability of traffic signs: Effects of prospective-user factors and sign design features Author: Annie W.Y.Ng Alan H.S. Chan Accident Analysis and.
Evaluating Effectiveness of Partitioning Complex Visual Displays on In-Vehicle Glance Behavior Momoha Takahashi 1,4, Ceyda D ü ndar 2,4, Yusuke Yamani.
Effects of practice, age, and task demands, on interference from a phone task while driving Author: David Shinar, Noam Tractinsky, Richard Compton Accident.
Year Review Nancy Rader May 13, esearch Emotion and Working Memory Temperament Infant Perception Attention and Early Language.
Cognitive demands of hands-free- phone conversation while driving Professor : Liu Student: Ruby.
Effects on driving behavior of congestion information and of scale of in-vehicle navigation systems Author: Shiaw-Tsyr Uang, Sheue-Ling Hwang Transportation.
Age-Differences in the Visual Information Processing Demands of Vehicle Instrument Panel Interfaces Heimstra Laboratories University of South Dakota Frank.
Logo Add Your Company Slogan A field evaluation of driver eye and head movement strategies toward environmental targets and distracters Professor: Liu.
Methods Inhibition of Return was used as a marker of attention capture.  After attention goes to a location it is inhibited from returning later. Results.
Judgments about collision in younger and older drivers Transportation Research Part F 6 (2003) 63–80 學生:董瑩蟬.
Human Supervisory Control May 13, 2004 Measuring Human Performance: Maintaining Constant Relative Position to a Lead Vehicle in a Simulation Paul.
Professor: Liu Student: Ruby
Field dependence and driver visual search behavior Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
Drinking and Driving.
Change detection and occlusion modes in road-traffic scenarios Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
CHILD PEDESTRIANS’ CROSSING GAP THRESHOLDS Student :董瑩蟬.
Differences in traffic judgments between young and old adult pedestrians Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
If Criticism is the Mother of Methodology, Who Created Driving Simulation? Jeff Caird, Associate Professor Transportation Research Board January 13, 2004.
Using a driving simulator to identify older drivers at inflated risk of motor vehicle crashes Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
Age and Visual Impairment Decrease Driving Performance as Measured on a Closed-Road Circuit 學生:董瑩蟬.
Detection of vehicles on the other crossing path at an intersection: visual search performance of elderly drivers 學生:董瑩蟬.
Accident Analysis and Prevention 31 (1999) 617–623 Dave Lamble *, Tatu Kauranen, Matti Laakso, Heikki Summala Cognitive load and detection thresholds in.
Monotony of road environment and driver fatigue: a simulator study Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
Misunderstanding of right-of-way rules at various pedestrian crossing types: Observational study and survey 學生:董瑩蟬.
Effect of a concurrent auditory task on visual search performance in a driving-related image-flicker task Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
Company Logo Professor: Liu student: Ruby The role of working memory, field dependence, visual search, and reaction time in the left turn performance of.
Age differences in visual abilities in nighttime driving field conditions Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
Conditional Probability: the likelihood that an event will occur GIVEN that another event has already occurred. A two way table & tree diagrams can represent.
An investigation of road crossing in a virtual environment Student :董瑩蟬.
Gap acceptance and risk-taking by young and mature drivers, both sober and alcohol-intoxicated, in a simulated driving task Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
Age Differences in Visual Search for Traffic Signs During a Simulated Conversation 學生:董瑩蟬.
The effects of mobile phone use on pedestrian crossing behaviour at signalised and unsignalised intersections 學生:董瑩蟬.
Driving simulator validation for speed research Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
Age related effects of restricted head movements on the useful field of view of drivers 學生:董瑩蟬.
Older Driver Failures of Attention at Intersections: Using Change Blindness Methods to Assess Turn Decision Accuracy Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
The impact of secondary task cognitive processing demand on driving performance Myra Blanco, Wayne J. Biever, John P. Gallagher, Thomas A. Dingus.
Emmorey, Karen, Robin Thompson, and Rachael Colvin Eye Gaze During Comprehension of American Sign Language by Native and Beginning Signers. Journal.
Motorcycle Conspicuity Dawn Marshall National Advanced Driving Simulator
姓名 : 許浩維 學號 :M 日期 : Road Accident: Driver Behaviour, Learning and Driving Task 1.
Traffic scene related change blindness in older drivers Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
A stop sign is a traffic sign that stands for coming to a complete stop at an intersection or end of the road.
Human Factors Progress IDS Project Nicholas Ward Jason Laberge Mick Rakauskas HumanFIRST Program.
Towards an express-diagnostics for level of processing and hazard perception Boris M. Velichkovsky et al. Transportation Research Part F 5 (2002)
Lab 2 Issues: Needed to adapt to the “normal environment”. We would have liked to see more rapid adjustment and a stable baseline. Most subjects adapted.
Texting While Driving -- ANOTHER Kind of Impairment.
Limitations in Drivers’ Ability to Recognize Pedestrians at Night 學生:董瑩蟬.
A Master Thesis Presented by Frank Diete, M.S. IEOR Evaluation of a Simulator Based, Novice Driver Risk Awareness Training Program 27th September, 2007.
LOGO Visual Attention in Driving: The Effects of Cognitive Load and Visual Disruption Professor: Liu Student: Ruby.
Safety Benefits of a Traffic Signal Designed for the Color Deficient
Presentation transcript:

DO IN-VEHICLE ADVANCE SIGNS BENEFIT OLDER AND YOUNGER DRIVER INTERSECTION PERFORMANCE? Professor: Liu Student: Ruby

Purpose & Motive Purpose –Using the HUD to decrease the accident in the interaction. Motive –Older drivers have the high percentage in the crash. –The advanced signs which can improve the car accidents.

References 1.Older drivers have the higher occurrence at the interaction accidents. (Preusser et al., 1998) 2.Older drivers have the lower reaction times, bad vision, and slower information processing abilities. (Caird et al, 2005; Maltz & Shinar, 1999)

Method Driving simulator –The simulator was combined with KQ Corporation (DriveSafety). Eye Movement System –Applied Sciences Laboratory (ASL) 501 system. –Head Mounted Optics Module (HMO). –Magnetic Head Tracking Hardware (MHT).

Method Participants –12 Young people. (6 male and 6 female) The age is from 18 to 24 (M=21.5) –12 Old people. (6 male and 6 female) The age is from 65 to 76 (M=69.2) –The detail is showed on Table 1.

Table 1

Procedures 6-minute practice drive included two light changes: one at 2.21 s and one at 1.73 s from the intersection stop line. Four 10-minute drives and for each session have 12 intersections. 48 interactions, there were 24 traffic sign changed to yellow. Half were 1.73 s and half were 2.21 s.

Procedures The first and last experiment session were baseline. The occurrence of lights that changed were randomized within each drive. The rectangular and diamond sign icons were displayed for 4 seconds in the HUD.

Result Independent variables: –Age group (18-24, 65+). –Drive type (baseline and experimental). –Head-up display sign type (diamond and rectangular signs). Dependent variables: –Stop or go behavior. –Vertical and horizontal stare variability. –Stare duration percent. –Stare count.

Result - Stop / Go probability The percentage of those differed between age groups in the baseline (χ2 (1, 288) = 4.4, p < 0.037) and HUD (χ2 (1, 288) = 11.8, p < 0.001) conditions

Result – Eye Movement Analysis Vertical variability. –Younger drivers had significantly greater vertical stare variability than the older group. F(1, 322) = 22.60, p< –In the baseline condition, drivers had significantly greater variability in vertical stare position than the experimental condition with the HUD. F(1, 322) = 4.18, p = Horizontal variability. –Older drivers had significantly greater horizontal variability compared to the younger drivers. F(1, 322) = 31.71, p < –In the baseline drive, a significantly higher horizontal stare variability was found compared to the experimental HUD drive. F(1, 322) =10.47, p < –Older drivers’ horizontal stare variability was significantly greater in the baseline intersections than in the experimental HUD intersections.

Result – Eye Movement Analysis Fixation duration percent. –Younger drivers spent a significantly large percent of their time stare on the HUD compared to the older drivers. F(1, 122) = 15.74, p < Fixation count. –The older drivers made a significantly larger number of stares to the roadway scene compared to the younger drivers. F(1, 298) = 15.86, p < –Younger drivers made significantly more stares to the HUD itself compared to the older drivers. F(1, 122) = 10.94, p=

Discussion Younger drivers tended to focus on the HUD more often the older drivers, it because: –They may have been less comfortable restricting their search for important traffic information ahead. –Younger drivers may have been more curious about the HUD presence, and thus looked at it more often.

Discussion When the HUD was present, stare variability decreased in both planes. The advanced HUD sign may decrease the requirement to look at the traffic lights as frequently. Reductions in horizontal scanning may carryover from looking at the HUD, which is not necessarily a positive benefit.