Effects of platooning on signal-detection performance, workload, and stress: A driving simulator study
Platooning, whereby automated vehicles travel closely together in a group, is attractive in terms of safety and efficiency. However, concerns exist about the psychological state of the platooning driver, who is exempted from direct control, yet remains responsible for monitoring the outside environm...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied ergonomics 2017-04, Vol.60, p.116-127 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Platooning, whereby automated vehicles travel closely together in a group, is attractive in terms of safety and efficiency. However, concerns exist about the psychological state of the platooning driver, who is exempted from direct control, yet remains responsible for monitoring the outside environment to detect potential threats. By means of a driving simulator experiment, we investigated the effects on recorded and self-reported measures of workload and stress for three task-instruction conditions: (1) No Task, in which participants had to monitor the road, (2) Voluntary Task, in which participants could do whatever they wanted, and (3) Detection Task, in which participants had to detect red cars. Twenty-two participants performed three 40-min runs in a constant-speed platoon, one condition per run in counterbalanced order. Contrary to some classic literature suggesting that humans are poor monitors, in the Detection Task condition participants attained a high mean detection rate (94.7%) and a low mean false alarm rate (0.8%). Results of the Dundee Stress State Questionnaire indicated that automated platooning was less distressing in the Voluntary Task than in the Detection Task and No Task conditions. In terms of heart rate variability, the Voluntary Task condition yielded a lower power in the low-frequency range relative to the high-frequency range (LF/HF ratio) than the Detection Task condition. Moreover, a strong time-on-task effect was found, whereby the mean heart rate dropped from the first to the third run. In conclusion, participants are able to remain attentive for a prolonged platooning drive, and the type of monitoring task has effects on the driver's psychological state.
•A driving simulator experiment investigated the effects on objective and subjective measures of workload and stress.•Contrary to classic literature, participants attained a high mean detection rate with a low mean false alarm rate.•Participants are able to remain attentive for a prolonged platooning drive.•Both the type of task and the time-on-task have effects on the driver's psychological state in an automated platoon. |
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ISSN: | 0003-6870 1872-9126 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.apergo.2016.10.016 |