Publikationen

Advancing Knowledge on Situation Comprehension in Dynamic Traffic Situations by Studying Eye Movements to Empty Spatial Locations

verfasst von
Wiebke Frank, Kristin Mühl, Agnes Rosner, Martin Baumann
Abstract

Objective: This study used the looking-at-nothing phenomenon to explore situation awareness (SA) and the effects of working memory (WM) load in driving situations. Background: While driving, people develop a mental representation of the environment. Since errors in retrieving information from this representation can have fatal consequences, it is essential for road safety to investigate this process. During retrieval, people tend to fixate spatial positions of visually encoded information, even if it is no longer available at that location. Previous research has shown that this “looking-at-nothing” behavior can be used to trace retrieval processes. Method: In a video-based laboratory experiment with 2 (WM) x 3 (SA level) within-subjects design, participants (N = 33) viewed a reduced screen and evaluated auditory statements relating to different SA levels on previously seen dynamic traffic scenarios while eye movements were recorded. Results: When retrieving information, subjects more frequently fixated emptied spatial locations associated with the information relevant for the probed SA level. The retrieval of anticipations (SA level 3) in contrast to the other SA level information resulted in more frequent gaze transitions that corresponded to the spatial dynamics of future driving behavior. Conclusion: The results support the idea that people build a visual-spatial mental image of a driving situation. Different gaze patterns when retrieving level-specific information indicate divergent retrieval processes. Application: Potential applications include developing new methodologies to assess the mental representation and SA of drivers objectively.

Externe Organisation(en)
Universitätsklinikum Ulm (UKU)
Universität Ulm
Universität Zürich (UZH)
Typ
Artikel
Journal
Human Factors
Band
65
Seiten
1674-1688
Anzahl der Seiten
15
ISSN
0018-7208
Publikationsdatum
12.2023
Publikationsstatus
Veröffentlicht
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Menschliche Einflussgrößen und Ergonomie, Angewandte Psychologie, Behaviorale Neurowissenschaften
Elektronische Version(en)
https://doi.org/10.1177/00187208211063693 (Zugang: Unbekannt)