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Takeover Requests in Highly Automated Truck Driving: How Do the Amount and Type of Additional Information Influence the Driver–Automation Interaction?
by
Richardson, Natalie T.
, Flohr, Lukas
, Michel, Britta
in
acceptance
/ Automation
/ Controllability
/ driving simulator study
/ Evaluation
/ highly automated truck driving
/ human–machine interface
/ Investigations
/ Situational awareness
/ takeover
/ Traffic congestion
/ Truck drivers
/ User experience
/ User interfaces
2018
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Takeover Requests in Highly Automated Truck Driving: How Do the Amount and Type of Additional Information Influence the Driver–Automation Interaction?
by
Richardson, Natalie T.
, Flohr, Lukas
, Michel, Britta
in
acceptance
/ Automation
/ Controllability
/ driving simulator study
/ Evaluation
/ highly automated truck driving
/ human–machine interface
/ Investigations
/ Situational awareness
/ takeover
/ Traffic congestion
/ Truck drivers
/ User experience
/ User interfaces
2018
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Do you wish to request the book?
Takeover Requests in Highly Automated Truck Driving: How Do the Amount and Type of Additional Information Influence the Driver–Automation Interaction?
by
Richardson, Natalie T.
, Flohr, Lukas
, Michel, Britta
in
acceptance
/ Automation
/ Controllability
/ driving simulator study
/ Evaluation
/ highly automated truck driving
/ human–machine interface
/ Investigations
/ Situational awareness
/ takeover
/ Traffic congestion
/ Truck drivers
/ User experience
/ User interfaces
2018
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Takeover Requests in Highly Automated Truck Driving: How Do the Amount and Type of Additional Information Influence the Driver–Automation Interaction?
Journal Article
Takeover Requests in Highly Automated Truck Driving: How Do the Amount and Type of Additional Information Influence the Driver–Automation Interaction?
2018
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Overview
Vehicle automation is linked to various benefits, such as increase in fuel and transport efficiency as well as increase in driving comfort. However, automation also comes with a variety of possible downsides, e.g., loss of situational awareness, loss of skills, and inappropriate trust levels regarding system functionality. Drawbacks differ at different automation levels. As highly automated driving (HAD, level 3) requires the driver to take over the driving task in critical situations within a limited period of time, the need for an appropriate human–machine interface (HMI) arises. To foster adequate and efficient human–machine interaction, this contribution presents a user-centered, iterative approach for HMI evaluation of highly automated truck driving. For HMI evaluation, a driving simulator study [n = 32] using a dynamic truck driving simulator was conducted to let users experience the HMI in a semi-real driving context. Participants rated three HMI concepts, differing in their informational content for HAD regarding acceptance, workload, user experience, and controllability. Results showed that all three HMI concepts achieved good to very good results in these measures. Overall, HMI concepts offering more information to the driver about the HAD system showed significantly higher ratings, depicting the positive effect of additional information on the driver–automation interaction.
Publisher
MDPI AG
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