The role of navigation instruction at intersections for older drivers and those with early Alzheimer’s disease

Author(s)
Paire-Ficout, L.; Marin-Lamellet, C.; Lafont, S.; Thomas-Antérion, C.; Laurent, B.
Year

Aims: Our purpose was to explore the effect of navigation instruction on older drivers’ driving performance at left turn intersections. Left turns at intersections are particularly complex because they require many perceptive and cognitive abilities under considerable time pressure.

Methods: Fifty-four participants were recruited: 18 drivers with early-stage Alzheimer’s disease (AD), 18 neurologically healthy older drivers and 18 younger individuals. Various cognitive processes were measured, and 9 left turn maneuvers with or without navigation instruction were evaluated during an in-traffic road test. The psychomotor, planning and decision-making components involved in left turn were also analyzed closely.

Results: Only older drivers (both healthy drivers and those with AD) were negatively affected by navigation instruction during the maneuver. The planning and decision-making components were more likely to be affected by the navigation instruction.

Conclusion: This finding highlights the importance of carefully considering the use of navigation instructions when developing navigation systems. Adapting this instruction is necessary to simplify our understanding of the real-world driving environment and to avoid increasing the cognitive load of older drivers.

Pages
249-254
Published in
Accident Analysis & Prevention
96 (November 2016)

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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.