• DocumentCode
    7903
  • Title

    Reorienting Driver Attention with Dynamic Tactile Cues

  • Author

    Ho, Chih-Chun ; Gray, Rebecca ; Spence, C.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Exp. Psychol., Univ. of Oxford, Oxford, UK
  • Volume
    7
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Jan.-March 2014
  • Firstpage
    86
  • Lastpage
    94
  • Abstract
    A series of three experiments was designed to investigate whether the presentation of moving tactile warning signals that are presented in a particular spatiotemporal configuration may be particularly effective in terms of facilitating a driver´s response to a target event. In the experiments reported here, participants´ visual attention was manipulated such that they were either attending to the frontal object that might occasionally approach them on a collision course, or else they were distracted by a color discrimination task presented from behind. We measured how rapidly participants were able to initiate a braking response to a looming visual target following the onset of vibrotactile warning signals presented from around their waist. The vibrotactile warning signals consisted of single, double, and triple upward moving cues (Experiment 1), triple upward and downward moving cues (Experiment 2), and triple random cues (Experiment 3). The results demonstrated a significant performance advantage following the presentation of dynamic triple cues over the static single tactile cues, regardless of the specific configuration of the triple cues. These findings point to the potential benefits of embedding dynamic information in warning signals for dynamic target events. These findings have important implications for the design of future vibrotactile warning signals.
  • Keywords
    alarm systems; braking; driver information systems; haptic interfaces; signal representation; spatiotemporal phenomena; braking response; collision course; color discrimination task; driver attention reorientation; driver response; dynamic tactile cues; looming visual target; moving tactile warning signal presentation; participant visual attention; spatiotemporal configuration; static single tactile cues; vibrotactile warning signals; Color; Educational institutions; Head; Image color analysis; Vehicles; Vibrations; Visualization; Haptic I/O; automotive; human factors; human information processing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Haptics, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1939-1412
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TOH.2013.62
  • Filename
    6678333