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Vibrotactile pedals: Provision of haptic feedback to support economical driving

Vibrotactile pedals: Provision of haptic feedback to support economical driving
Vibrotactile pedals: Provision of haptic feedback to support economical driving

The use of haptic feedback is currently an underused modality in the driving environment, especially with respect to vehicle manufacturers. This exploratory study evaluates the effects of a vibrotactile (or haptic) accelerator pedal on car driving performance and perceived workload using a driving simulator. A stimulus was triggered when the driver exceeded a 50% throttle threshold, past which is deemed excessive for economical driving. Results showed significant decreases in mean acceleration values, and maximum and excess throttle use when the haptic pedal was active as compared to a baseline condition. As well as the positive changes to driver behaviour, subjective workload decreased when driving with the haptic pedal as compared to when drivers were simply asked to drive economically. The literature suggests that the haptic processing channel offers a largely untapped resource in the driving environment, and could provide information without overloading the other attentional resource pools used in driving.Practitioner Summary: Overloaded or distracted drivers present a real safety danger to themselves and others. Providing driving-related feedback can improve performance but risks distracting them further; however, giving such information through the underused haptic processing channel can provide the driver with critical information without overloading the driver's visual channel.

acceleration, driving, eco-driving, haptic feedback, vibrotactile, workload
0014-0139
282-292
Birrell, Stewart A.
94f1ee91-f724-4011-93c2-f60a938545be
Young, Mark S.
3f79589e-2000-4cb0-832a-6eba54f50130
Weldon, Alex M.
acfa9124-616c-47ec-b6b1-b9361268ccad
Birrell, Stewart A.
94f1ee91-f724-4011-93c2-f60a938545be
Young, Mark S.
3f79589e-2000-4cb0-832a-6eba54f50130
Weldon, Alex M.
acfa9124-616c-47ec-b6b1-b9361268ccad

Birrell, Stewart A., Young, Mark S. and Weldon, Alex M. (2013) Vibrotactile pedals: Provision of haptic feedback to support economical driving. Ergonomics, 56 (2), 282-292. (doi:10.1080/00140139.2012.760750).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The use of haptic feedback is currently an underused modality in the driving environment, especially with respect to vehicle manufacturers. This exploratory study evaluates the effects of a vibrotactile (or haptic) accelerator pedal on car driving performance and perceived workload using a driving simulator. A stimulus was triggered when the driver exceeded a 50% throttle threshold, past which is deemed excessive for economical driving. Results showed significant decreases in mean acceleration values, and maximum and excess throttle use when the haptic pedal was active as compared to a baseline condition. As well as the positive changes to driver behaviour, subjective workload decreased when driving with the haptic pedal as compared to when drivers were simply asked to drive economically. The literature suggests that the haptic processing channel offers a largely untapped resource in the driving environment, and could provide information without overloading the other attentional resource pools used in driving.Practitioner Summary: Overloaded or distracted drivers present a real safety danger to themselves and others. Providing driving-related feedback can improve performance but risks distracting them further; however, giving such information through the underused haptic processing channel can provide the driver with critical information without overloading the driver's visual channel.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 14 December 2012
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 February 2013
Keywords: acceleration, driving, eco-driving, haptic feedback, vibrotactile, workload

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 480295
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480295
ISSN: 0014-0139
PURE UUID: ec2c4563-a7ad-4d0d-b4e5-ea1f508ea468
ORCID for Mark S. Young: ORCID iD orcid.org/0009-0001-2594-453X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 01 Aug 2023 17:18
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:20

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Contributors

Author: Stewart A. Birrell
Author: Mark S. Young ORCID iD
Author: Alex M. Weldon

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