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book (4)


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2020 (4)

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Book
Beneath the surface : understanding nature in the Mullica Valley Estuary
Author:
ISBN: 081359023X Year: 2020 Publisher: New Brunswick, New Jersey : Rutgers University Press,

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Abstract

The Mullica Valley estuary and its watershed, formed over the last 10,000 years, are among the cleanest estuaries along the east coast of the United States. This 365,000-acre ecosystem benefits from a combination of protected watershed, low human population density, and general lack of extensive development. In Beneath the Surface, marine scientist Ken Able helps the reader penetrate the surface and gain insights into the kinds of habitats, animals, and plants that live there. Readers will gain a better understanding of the importance of these shallow waters; how the amount of salt in the water determines where animals and plants are found in estuaries; the day-night, seasonal, and annual variation in their occurrence; and how change is occurring as the result of climate variation. Throughout the book are insightful sidebars telling intimate stories of where various animals came from and where they are going as they travel through the estuary on their way to and from other portions of the east coast. Beneath the Surface emphasizes the kinds and importance of the animals and plants that live beneath the surface of this unique ecosystem.


Book
Test and Evaluation Methods for Human-Machine Interfaces of Automated Vehicles
Authors: --- --- --- ---
Year: 2020 Publisher: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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Abstract

This book summarizes the latest developments in the area of human factors test and evaluation methods for automated vehicles. Future vehicles will allow a transition of responsibility from the driver to the automated driving system and vice versa. Drivers will have the opportunity to use a wide variety of different driver assistance systems within the same vehicle. This coexistence of different automation levels creates new challenges in the design of the vehicle’s human–machine interface (HMI), which have to be accounted for by human factors experts, both in industrial design and in academia. This book brings together the latest developments, empirical evaluations and guidelines on various topics, such as the design and evaluation of interior as well as exterior HMIs for automated vehicles, and the assessment of the impact of automated vehicles on non-automated road users and driver state assessment (e.g., fatigue, motion sickness, fallback readiness) during automated driving.

Keywords

History of engineering & technology --- virtual reality --- automated driving --- pedestrians --- decision making --- crossing --- eHMI --- eye-tracking --- attention distribution --- road safety --- driverless vehicles --- behavioural adaptation --- SAE L3 motorway chauffeur --- system usage --- acceptance --- attention --- secondary task --- highly automated driving --- HAD --- takeover --- conditional automation --- intelligent vehicles --- objective complexity --- subjective complexity --- familiarity --- cognitive assistance --- takeover quality --- standardized test procedure --- use cases --- test protocol --- Adaptive HMI --- automotive user interfaces --- driver behaviour --- automated vehicles --- automated driving systems --- HMI --- guidelines --- heuristic evaluation --- checklist --- expert evaluation --- human-machine interface --- mode awareness --- conditionally automated driving --- human–machine interface --- usability --- validity --- method development --- motion sickness --- methodology --- driving comfort --- multi-vehicle simulation --- mixed traffic --- measurement method --- SAE Level 2 --- SAE Level 3 --- human factors --- human machine interface --- controllability --- L3Pilot --- marking automated vehicles --- automated vehicles―human drivers interaction --- explicit communication --- external human-machine interface --- (automated) vehicle–pedestrian interaction --- implicit communication --- Wizard of Oz --- video --- setup comparison/method comparison --- partially automated driving --- non-driving related tasks --- take-over situations --- test protocol development --- user studies (simulator --- closed circuit) --- sleep --- sleep inertia --- HMI design --- external human–machine interface --- interface size --- legibility --- spatiotemporal displays --- sensory augmentation --- reliability display --- uncertainty encoding --- automotive hmi --- human-machine cooperation --- cooperative driver assistance --- state transparency display --- self-driving vehicles --- test methods --- evaluation --- user studies --- driver state --- discomfort --- psychophysiology --- heart-rate variability (HRV) --- skin conductance response (SCR) --- highly automated driving (HAD)


Book
Test and Evaluation Methods for Human-Machine Interfaces of Automated Vehicles
Authors: --- --- --- ---
Year: 2020 Publisher: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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Bookmark

Abstract

This book summarizes the latest developments in the area of human factors test and evaluation methods for automated vehicles. Future vehicles will allow a transition of responsibility from the driver to the automated driving system and vice versa. Drivers will have the opportunity to use a wide variety of different driver assistance systems within the same vehicle. This coexistence of different automation levels creates new challenges in the design of the vehicle’s human–machine interface (HMI), which have to be accounted for by human factors experts, both in industrial design and in academia. This book brings together the latest developments, empirical evaluations and guidelines on various topics, such as the design and evaluation of interior as well as exterior HMIs for automated vehicles, and the assessment of the impact of automated vehicles on non-automated road users and driver state assessment (e.g., fatigue, motion sickness, fallback readiness) during automated driving.

Keywords

History of engineering & technology --- virtual reality --- automated driving --- pedestrians --- decision making --- crossing --- eHMI --- eye-tracking --- attention distribution --- road safety --- driverless vehicles --- behavioural adaptation --- SAE L3 motorway chauffeur --- system usage --- acceptance --- attention --- secondary task --- highly automated driving --- HAD --- takeover --- conditional automation --- intelligent vehicles --- objective complexity --- subjective complexity --- familiarity --- cognitive assistance --- takeover quality --- standardized test procedure --- use cases --- test protocol --- Adaptive HMI --- automotive user interfaces --- driver behaviour --- automated vehicles --- automated driving systems --- HMI --- guidelines --- heuristic evaluation --- checklist --- expert evaluation --- human-machine interface --- mode awareness --- conditionally automated driving --- human–machine interface --- usability --- validity --- method development --- motion sickness --- methodology --- driving comfort --- multi-vehicle simulation --- mixed traffic --- measurement method --- SAE Level 2 --- SAE Level 3 --- human factors --- human machine interface --- controllability --- L3Pilot --- marking automated vehicles --- automated vehicles―human drivers interaction --- explicit communication --- external human-machine interface --- (automated) vehicle–pedestrian interaction --- implicit communication --- Wizard of Oz --- video --- setup comparison/method comparison --- partially automated driving --- non-driving related tasks --- take-over situations --- test protocol development --- user studies (simulator --- closed circuit) --- sleep --- sleep inertia --- HMI design --- external human–machine interface --- interface size --- legibility --- spatiotemporal displays --- sensory augmentation --- reliability display --- uncertainty encoding --- automotive hmi --- human-machine cooperation --- cooperative driver assistance --- state transparency display --- self-driving vehicles --- test methods --- evaluation --- user studies --- driver state --- discomfort --- psychophysiology --- heart-rate variability (HRV) --- skin conductance response (SCR) --- highly automated driving (HAD)


Book
Test and Evaluation Methods for Human-Machine Interfaces of Automated Vehicles
Authors: --- --- --- ---
Year: 2020 Publisher: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

Loading...
Export citation

Choose an application

Bookmark

Abstract

This book summarizes the latest developments in the area of human factors test and evaluation methods for automated vehicles. Future vehicles will allow a transition of responsibility from the driver to the automated driving system and vice versa. Drivers will have the opportunity to use a wide variety of different driver assistance systems within the same vehicle. This coexistence of different automation levels creates new challenges in the design of the vehicle’s human–machine interface (HMI), which have to be accounted for by human factors experts, both in industrial design and in academia. This book brings together the latest developments, empirical evaluations and guidelines on various topics, such as the design and evaluation of interior as well as exterior HMIs for automated vehicles, and the assessment of the impact of automated vehicles on non-automated road users and driver state assessment (e.g., fatigue, motion sickness, fallback readiness) during automated driving.

Keywords

virtual reality --- automated driving --- pedestrians --- decision making --- crossing --- eHMI --- eye-tracking --- attention distribution --- road safety --- driverless vehicles --- behavioural adaptation --- SAE L3 motorway chauffeur --- system usage --- acceptance --- attention --- secondary task --- highly automated driving --- HAD --- takeover --- conditional automation --- intelligent vehicles --- objective complexity --- subjective complexity --- familiarity --- cognitive assistance --- takeover quality --- standardized test procedure --- use cases --- test protocol --- Adaptive HMI --- automotive user interfaces --- driver behaviour --- automated vehicles --- automated driving systems --- HMI --- guidelines --- heuristic evaluation --- checklist --- expert evaluation --- human-machine interface --- mode awareness --- conditionally automated driving --- human–machine interface --- usability --- validity --- method development --- motion sickness --- methodology --- driving comfort --- multi-vehicle simulation --- mixed traffic --- measurement method --- SAE Level 2 --- SAE Level 3 --- human factors --- human machine interface --- controllability --- L3Pilot --- marking automated vehicles --- automated vehicles―human drivers interaction --- explicit communication --- external human-machine interface --- (automated) vehicle–pedestrian interaction --- implicit communication --- Wizard of Oz --- video --- setup comparison/method comparison --- partially automated driving --- non-driving related tasks --- take-over situations --- test protocol development --- user studies (simulator --- closed circuit) --- sleep --- sleep inertia --- HMI design --- external human–machine interface --- interface size --- legibility --- spatiotemporal displays --- sensory augmentation --- reliability display --- uncertainty encoding --- automotive hmi --- human-machine cooperation --- cooperative driver assistance --- state transparency display --- self-driving vehicles --- test methods --- evaluation --- user studies --- driver state --- discomfort --- psychophysiology --- heart-rate variability (HRV) --- skin conductance response (SCR) --- highly automated driving (HAD)

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