The effect of peripheral visual feedforward system in enhancing situation awareness and mitigating motion sickness in fully automated driving

Juffrizal Karjanto, Nidzamuddin Md. Yusof, Chao Wang, Jacques Terken, Frank Delbressine, Matthias Rauterberg

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    79 Citations (Scopus)
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    Abstract

    This study investigates the impact of peripheral visual information in alleviating motion sickness when engaging in non-driving tasks in fully automated driving. A peripheral visual feedforward system (PVFS) was designed providing information about the upcoming actions of the automated car in the periphery of the occupant's attention. It was hypothesized that after getting the information from the PVFS, the users’ situation awareness is improved while motion sickness is prevented from developing. The PVFS was also assumed not to increase mental workload nor interrupt the performance of the non-driving tasks. The study was accomplished on an actual road using a Wizard of Oz technique deploying an instrumented car that behaved like a real fully automated car. The test rides using the current setup and methodology indicated high consistency in simulating the automated driving. Results showed that with PVFS, situation awareness was enhanced and motion sickness was lessened while mental workload was unchanged. Participants also indicated high hedonistic user experience with the PVFS. While providing peripheral information showed positive results, further study such as delivering richer information and active head movement are possibly needed.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)678-692
    Number of pages15
    JournalTransportation Research. Part F: Traffic Psychology and Behaviour
    Volume58
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2018

    Funding

    The authors would like to express their appreciation to the Universiti Teknikal Malaysia Melaka (UTeM) and Malaysian Ministry of Higher Education for the funding of the Ph.D. programs of Juffrizal Karjanto and Nidzamuddin Md. Yusof.

    Keywords

    • Fully automated vehicle
    • Mental workload
    • Motion sickness
    • Peripheral visual feedforward system
    • Situation awareness
    • User experience

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