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Accid Anal Prev ; 208: 107790, 2024 Sep 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39303425

RESUMEN

Designing an effective takeover request (TOR) in conditionally automated vehicles is crucial to ensure driving safety when the system reaches its limit. In our study, we aimed to investigate the effects of looming tactile TORs (whose urgency is dynamically mapped to the situation's criticality as the vehicle approaches the upcoming obstacle) on takeover performance and subjective experience compared with conventional non-looming TORs (several tactile pulses with consistent inter-pulse intervals). In addition, the impact of the TOR urgency level (with urgency levels matched or unmatched to the situation's criticality) was considered. A total of 30 participants were recruited for this study. They were first asked to map the urgency of tactile signals to the criticality of takeover situations with various times to collision according to the recorded video clips. The looming TORs were constructed based on these mapping results. Then, a simulated driving experiment, employing a within-subject design, was conducted to explore the effects of the tactile TOR type (looming vs. non-looming) and urgency level (less urgency vs. matched urgency vs. greater urgency) on takeover performance and drivers' subjective experience. The results showed that the looming TOR can lead to a shorter takeover time and less maximum lateral acceleration compared with the non-looming TOR. Drivers also rated the looming TOR as more useful. Therefore, the looming TOR has great application potential for enhancing driving safety in automated vehicles. In addition, we found that as the TOR's level of urgency increased, the takeover time decreased. However, the TOR with an urgency level matched to the situation's criticality received higher usefulness and satisfaction ratings, suggesting that there was an important trade-off between the advantage of high-urgency TORs in speeding up driver responses and its cost of a poor experience. The findings of our study shed some light on the design and implementation of the takeover warning system for related practitioners.

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