4.5 Article

Evaluating the impacts of situational awareness and mental stress on takeover performance under conditional automation

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.trf.2021.10.002

Keywords

Automated vehicle; Takeover performance; Eye-tracking; Electrocardiography; Driving simulator

Funding

  1. Center for Connected and Automated Transportation (CCAT) University Transportation Center (USDOT) [69A3551747105]

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The study analyzes differences in driver's situational awareness (SA) and mental stress over successive experiment runs using physiological indicators such as eye-tracking measures and heart rate variability. Significant negative effects of change in NHR after the takeover warning on takeover performance were found, providing valuable insights for designing integrated in-vehicle driver monitoring and warning systems to enhance road safety and user experience.
Several safety concerns emerge for the transition of control from the automated driving system to a human driver after the vehicle issues a takeover warning under conditional vehicle automation (SAE Level 3). In this context, recent advances in in-vehicle driver monitoring systems enable tracking drivers' physiological indicators (e.g., eye-tracking and heart rate (HR) measures) to assess their real-time situational awareness (SA) and mental stress. This study seeks to analyze differences in driver's SA and mental stress over time (i.e., successive experiment runs) using these physiological indicators to assess their impacts on takeover performance. We use eyetracking measures (i.e., on-road glance rate and road attention ratio) as indicators of driver's SA during automated driving. Further, we use the pre-warning normalized HR (NHR) and HR variability (HRV) as well as the change in NHR and HRV after the takeover warning as indicators of mental stress immediately before and the change in mental stress after the takeover warning, respectively. To analyze the effects of driver state (in terms of SA and mental stress) on the overall takeover performance, this study uses a comprehensive metric, Takeover Performance Index (TOPI), proposed in our previous work (Agrawal & Peeta, 2021). The TOPI combines multiple driving performance indicators while partly accounting for their interdependencies. Results from statistical analyses of data from 134 participants using driving simulator experiments illustrate significant differences in driver state over successive experiment runs, except for the change in mental stress after the takeover warning. Some significant correlations were found between the physiological indicators of SA and mental stress used in this study. Takeover performance model results illustrate a significant negative effect of change in NHR after the takeover warning on the TOPI. However, none of the other physiological indicators show significant impacts on takeover performance. The study findings provide valuable insights to auto manufacturers for designing integrated in-vehicle driver monitoring and warning systems that enhance road safety and user experience.

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