Title :
Toward a practical wall see-through system for drivers: How simple can it be?
Author :
Yasuda, Hozumi ; Ohama, Y.
Author_Institution :
Toyota Central R&D Labs., Inc., Nagakute, Japan
Abstract :
This study specifically examines wall see-through visualization for drivers at blind corners to prevent crossing collisions. We believe that realizing the desired effect with the simplest visualization is a key to building practical systems, although previous studies mainly targeted rich visualization as if the wall were actually transparent. We compared several visualization levels using qualitative and quantitative measures based on performance of the driver´s collision estimation and the meaning assignment to visual stimuli. The results revealed that displaying only the direction of the obscured vehicle by a small circle is sufficient for collision estimation, although it was perceived as less informative. We also obtained a preliminary result indicating that the meaning assignment performance is significantly lower in a peripheral region of the driver´s view. Although both collision estimation and meaning assignment performance are necessary for building an effective system, these results clarify that future studies must specifically examine the meaning assignment performance of the stimuli.
Keywords :
data visualisation; driver information systems; blind corner driving; crossing collision prevention; driver collision estimation; meaning assignment performance; qualitative measure; quantitative measure; rich visualization; visual stimuli; wall see-through visualization; Accidents; Augmented reality; Buildings; Estimation; Vehicles; Videos; Visualization; active safety; advanced driver assistance systems; peripheral vision; wall see-through; x-ray vision;
Conference_Titel :
Mixed and Augmented Reality (ISMAR), 2012 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Atlanta, GA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-4660-3
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4673-4661-0
DOI :
10.1109/ISMAR.2012.6402600