THE EFFECTS OF A SIMULATED HEAD-UP DISPLAY SPEEDOMETER ON PERCEPTUAL TASK PERFORMANCE

Author(s)
Tyrrell, R.A. & Leibowitz, H.W.
Year
Abstract

This study compared the effects of simulated head-up display (hud) and dashboard-mounted digital speedometers on key perceptual driving tasks in a simulated driving environment. Subjects were 20 male and female volunteers ranging in age from 19 to 51 years. A videotape, taken from the driver's perspective, of a car traveling along a memorized route served as the test scene. While viewing the test scene subjects performed tasks related to navigation, speed monitoring, and salient cue detection. The simulated hud speedometer produced generally superior performance on the experimental tasks; most important, it enabled subjects to respond significantly more quickly to thesalient cues. Implications for the effects of the huds on automobile safety are discussed.

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Publication

Library number
I 839849 IRRD 9106
Source

Human Factors. 1990 /06. 32(3) Pp329-339 (Figs., Tabs., 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.