Toward Hazard or Action? Effects of Directional Vibrotactile Takeover Requests on Takeover Performance in Automated Driving

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION(2023)

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摘要
The vibrotactile modality has great potential for presenting takeover requests (TORs) to get distracted drivers back into the control loop. However, few studies investigate the effectiveness of directional vibrotactile TORs. Whether TORs should be directed toward the direction of hazard (stimulus-response incompatibility) or the direction of avoidance action (stimulus-response compatibility) remains inconclusive. The present study explored the impact of directional vibrotactile TORs (toward-hazard, toward-action, and non-directional) on takeover performance. The influences of TORs lead time (3 s, 4 s, 6 s, and 8 s) and non-driving related tasks (NDRTs) (playing Tetris games and monitoring the road) on the effect of directional TORs were also probed. A total of 48 participants were recruited for our simulated driving study. Results showed that when drivers were engaged in NDRTs during automated driving, directional TORs were more effective than non-directional TORs. Specifically, at the lead times of 6 s and 8 s, both toward-hazard and toward-action TORs could shorten steering response times, compared with the non-directional TORs. At the lead times of 3 s and 4 s, toward-action TORs were more beneficial, as the maximum lateral acceleration was smaller than toward-hazard and non-directional TORs. However, when drivers monitored the road during automated driving, no obvious difference existed between directional and non-directional TORs, regardless of how long the lead time was. The findings in the present study shed light on the design and implementation of the tactile takeover system for automobile designers.
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