Change detection and occlusion modes in road-traffic scenarios.

Author(s)
Dornhoefer, S.M. Kopf, M. Helmert, J. Joos, M. & Velichkovsky, B.M.
Year
Abstract

Change blindness phenomena are widely known in cognitive science, but their relation to driving is not quite clear. The authors report a study where subjects viewed colour video stills of natural traffic while eye movements were recorded. A change could occur randomly in three different occlusion modes-blinks, blanks and saccades - or during a fixation (as control condition). These changes could be either relevant or irrelevant with respect to the traffic safety. The authors used deletions as well as insertions of objects. All occlusion modes were equivalent concerning detection rate and reaction time, deviating from the control condition only. The detection of relevant changes was both more likely and faster than that of irrelevant ones, particularly for relevant insertions, which approached the base line level. Even in this case, it took about 180 ms longer to react to changes when they occurred during a saccade, blink or blank. In a second study, relevant insertions and the blank occlusion were used in a driving simulator environment. The authors found a surprising effect in the dynamic setting: an advantage in change detection rate and time with blanks compared to the control condition. Change detection was also good during blinks, but not in saccades. Possible explanation of these effects and their practical implications are discussed. (Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
I E116280 /83 / ITRD E116280
Source

Transportation Research, Part F: Traffic Psychology And Behaviour. 2002 /06. 5(2) Pp99-109 (24 Refs.)

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.