EFFECT OF BACKGROUND SCENE COMPLEXITY AND FIELD DEPENDENCE ON THE LEGIBILITY OF HEAD-UP DISPLAYS FOR AUTOMOTIVE APPLICATIONS.

Author(s)
Ward, N.J. Parkes, A. & Crone, P.R.
Year
Abstract

This study examined the legibility of information presented on head-up displays (HUDs) for automotive application as a function of background scene complexity, the position of the HUD within field of view relative to the background scene, and the perceptual capacity of the perceiver. Groups of field-dependent and field-independent subjects viewed video footage from the perspective of following a lead car on an open road with low, moderate, and high scene complexity. Subjects were required to track the lead vehicle and identify HUD-presented targets of a specified orientation and specified changes in a HUD-presented speedometer. The results indicate that (a) HUD legibility deteriorated with increased visual complexity of the background scene; (b) positioning the HUD on the roadway reduced the effect of background scene complexity on HUD legibility; and (c) field-dependent subjects made fewer correct and more false positive target identifications than did field-independent subjects.

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Publication

Library number
TRIS 00724432
Source

Human Factors. 1995 /12. 37(4) Pp735-745 (4 Fig., 28 Ref.)

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