2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.trf.2005.04.012
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Effects of visual and cognitive load in real and simulated motorway driving

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Cited by 649 publications
(401 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
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“…However, even though a haptic solution might be the preferred option in the context of gaze direction, the additional cognitive distraction that such a system might impose on a driver (drivers may be thinking about the haptic system whilst looking at the road ahead) was not evaluated in this study. Even though in this study drivers reported less workload when using the haptic advice, other studies have reported greater gaze concentration towards the road centre (Engström, Johansson, and Östlund, 2005;Recarte and Nunes, 2003) under cognitive distraction. More importantly, reaction time to events which occur in the forward scene has been found to increase.…”
Section: Learning Varies With System Typecontrasting
confidence: 74%
“…However, even though a haptic solution might be the preferred option in the context of gaze direction, the additional cognitive distraction that such a system might impose on a driver (drivers may be thinking about the haptic system whilst looking at the road ahead) was not evaluated in this study. Even though in this study drivers reported less workload when using the haptic advice, other studies have reported greater gaze concentration towards the road centre (Engström, Johansson, and Östlund, 2005;Recarte and Nunes, 2003) under cognitive distraction. More importantly, reaction time to events which occur in the forward scene has been found to increase.…”
Section: Learning Varies With System Typecontrasting
confidence: 74%
“…CL has been shown to have important implications for learning [13], safety in driving [4], aviation [16], and user interface design [10]. Being able to accurately monitor CL in real world environment would have important and far-reaching implications.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, multitasking of driving and conversing on a cell phone is technologically available, but intuitively seems dangerous in some circumstances. Although driving becomes sufficiently cognitively automated (Schneider, 1999) to permit experienced drivers to perform other tasks at the same time, such as carrying on a conversation, a large number of behavioral studies have now shown that performing another cognitive task while driving an actual or virtual car substantially degrades driving performance Nilsson, 1994, 1995;Anttila and Luoma, 2005;Beede and Kass, 2006;Brookhuis et al, 1991;Consiglio et al, 2003;Drory, 1985;Engström et al, 2005;Haigney et al, 2000;Hancock et al, 2003;Horberry et al, 2006;Horrey and Wickens, 2004;Hunton and Rose, 2005;Jamson and Merat, 2005;Kubose et al, 2006;Lamble et al, 1999;Lesch and Hancock, 2004;Liu and Lee, 2005;Matthews et al, 2003;McKnight and McKnight, 1993;Patten et al, 2004;Ranney et al, 2005; Nunes, 2000, 2003;Santos et al, 2005;Shinar et al, 2005; Drews, 2004, 2007;Strayer et al, 2003Strayer et al, , 2006Strayer and Johnston, 2001; Bolling, 2005, 2006;Treffner and Barrett, 2004). Although some of these studies show that some aspects of driving are unaffected by a secondary task (e.g., Haigney et al, 2000) and in some cases certain aspects improve (e.g., Brookhuis et al, 1991;Engström et al, 2005), a recent meta-analysis of the literature suggests a large overall decrement in driving performance when a secondary task is added (Horey and Wickens, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%