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Disengagement from driving when using automation during a 4-week field trial
Affiliation:1. Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, United States;2. MIT Center for Transportation and Logistics AgeLab, United States;1. Chemnitz University of Technology, Department of Psychology, Cognitive and Engineering Psychology, D-09107 Chemnitz, Germany;2. BMW Group, D-80939 Munich, Germany;1. Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, Arlington, VA, United States;2. Westat, Rockville, MD, United States;1. Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands;2. University of Southampton, United Kingdom;1. Transportation Research Group, University of Southampton, UK;2. VTI Swedish National Road and Transport Research Institute, Box 8072, SE-402 78 Göteborg, Sweden;3. Jaguar Land Rover Research, i-House, Coventry, UK;1. TU Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands;2. SWOV Institute for Road Safety Research, The Hague, the Netherlands;3. TNO Traffic & Transport, The Hague, the Netherlands;4. Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands
Abstract:IntroductionA small body of research on the real-world use of commercially available partial driving automation suggests that drivers may struggle with or otherwise lapse in adequately monitoring the system and highway environment, and little is known about key issues such as how behavior associated with system use changes over time. The current study assessed how driver disengagement, defined as visual-manual interaction with electronics or removal of hands from the wheel, differed as drivers became more accustomed to partial automation over a 4-week trial.MethodsTen volunteers drove a Volvo S90 with adaptive cruise control (ACC), which automates speed and headway, and Pilot Assist, which combines ACC and continuous lane centering. Instrumentation captured automation use, secondary task activity, hands-on-wheel status, vehicle speed, and GPS location during all trips.ResultsThe longer drivers used the Pilot Assist partial automation system, the more likely they were to become disengaged, with a significant increase in the odds of observing participants with both hands off the steering wheel or manipulating a cell phone relative to manual control. Results associated with use of ACC found comparable or lower levels of disengagement compared to manual driving as the study progressed.DiscussionThis study highlights concerns about vehicle control and the degree to which drivers remain actively in the loop when using automation. Calls for implementing more robust driver monitoring with partial automation appear warranted—particularly those that track head or eye position.
Keywords:Driving automation  Trust  Complacency  Disengagement  Hands-off-wheel  Secondary activity
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