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Artículo

Inglés

ID: <

ftunivphautsdefr:oai:HAL:hal-02602458v1

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·

DOI: <

10.1016/j.ijhcs.2007.09.002

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De dónde provienen estos datos
The role of intervening variables in driver-ACC cooperation; Role of intermediate variables in driver-ACC cooperation

Resumen

[Departement_IRSTEA]Ecotechnologies [TR1_IRSTEA]INSPIRE ; International audience ; This paper analyzes the behavior of drivers using Adaptive Cruise Control (ACC) within the theoretical framework of Human-Machine Cooperation. The study was carried out on a driving simulator. Driving task performance data and responses to a trust questionnaire were analyzed in order to examine the relationship between driver reliance on ACC and such intervening variables as trust, perceived workload and perceived risk. The participants were divided a posteriori into two groups according to their use of the ACC device during the experimental run. The results show that high-use drivers seemed to cooperate more with ACC than low-use drivers, who tended to perceive more risk and a higher workload. These findings are discussed in the light of Riley's theory of operator reliance on automation.

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