Journal
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -Publisher
NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-83336-4
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Funding
- AUTODRIVE project [ANR-18-CE22-0002-01]
- LABEX CORTEX of Universite de Lyon, within the program ''Investissements d'Avenir'' [ANR-11-LABX-0042, ANR-11-IDEX-0007]
- Finnish Cultural Foundation [00150514]
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Active visual scanning is crucial in human locomotion, especially in driving where steering and speed adjustments are based on visual inputs. This study used scan path analysis to investigate sequential aspects of visual scanning in manual and highly automated driving, identifying different stereotypical visual sequences and discussing the impact of automation on these sequences.
Active visual scanning of the scene is a key task-element in all forms of human locomotion. In the field of driving, steering (lateral control) and speed adjustments (longitudinal control) models are largely based on drivers' visual inputs. Despite knowledge gained on gaze behaviour behind the wheel, our understanding of the sequential aspects of the gaze strategies that actively sample that input remains restricted. Here, we apply scan path analysis to investigate sequences of visual scanning in manual and highly automated simulated driving. Five stereotypical visual sequences were identified under manual driving: forward polling (i.e. far road explorations), guidance, backwards polling (i.e. near road explorations), scenery and speed monitoring scan paths. Previously undocumented backwards polling scan paths were the most frequent. Under highly automated driving backwards polling scan paths relative frequency decreased, guidance scan paths relative frequency increased, and automation supervision specific scan paths appeared. The results shed new light on the gaze patterns engaged while driving. Methodological and empirical questions for future studies are discussed.
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