DocumentCode
2283067
Title
Effects of Autonomy, Traffic Conditions and Driver Personality Traits on Attitudes and Trust towards In-Vehicle Agents
Author
Cramer, Henriette ; Evers, Vanessa ; Kemper, Nicander ; Wielinga, Bob
Author_Institution
Human-Comput. Studies Lab., Univ. of Amsterdam, Amsterdam
Volume
3
fYear
2008
fDate
9-12 Dec. 2008
Firstpage
477
Lastpage
482
Abstract
In-vehicle agents can potentially avert dangerous driving situations by adapting to the driver, context and traffic conditions. However, perceptions of system autonomy, the way agents offer assistance, driving contexts and userspsila personality traits can all affect acceptance and trust. This paper reports on a survey-based experiment (N=100) that further investigates how these factors affect attitudes. The 2 x 2, between-subject, video-based design varied driving context (high, low density traffic) and type of agent (providing information, providing instructions). Both type of agent and traffic context affected attitudes towards the agent, with attitudes being most positive towards the instructive agent in a light traffic context. Participants scoring high on locus of control reported a higher intent to follow-up on the agent´s instructions. Driving-related anxiety and aggression increased perceived urgency of the video scenario.
Keywords
driver information systems; multi-agent systems; dangerous driving situations; driver personality traits; in-vehicle agents; system autonomy; traffic conditions; video scenario; Adaptive control; Adaptive systems; Attitude control; Control systems; Information systems; Intelligent agent; Navigation; Programmable control; Roads; Stress control; autonomy; in-vehicle agents; personality traits; trust; user control;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Web Intelligence and Intelligent Agent Technology, 2008. WI-IAT '08. IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conference on
Conference_Location
Sydney, NSW
Print_ISBN
978-0-7695-3496-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/WIIAT.2008.326
Filename
4740825
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