Use of these proceedings
Licence Creative Commons CC By NC ND
SAFER Vehicle and Traffic Safety Centre chose the Creative Commons licence CC BY-NC-ND for the publication of these proceedings.
With this licence, you are free to share, copy and redistribute the papers and abstracts of the conference in any medium or format, under the following terms :
- Attribution : You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.
- NonCommercial : You may not use the material for commercial purposes.
- NoDerivatives : If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you may not distribute the modified material.
How to cite these proceedings
Victor T., Bruyas M.P., Regan M., Brusque C., Fort A. and Jallais C. (Eds.), 2018. Proceedings of the 6th Driver Distraction and Inattention conference, Gothenburg, Sweden, October 15-17, 2018 (online).
How to refer to contributions
[Authors], 2018, Title of conference paper. In : Victor T., Bruyas M.P., Regan M., Brusque C., Fort A. and Jallais C. (Eds.), 2018. Proceedings of the 6th Driver Distraction and Inattention conference, Gothenburg, Sweden, October 15-17, 2018 (online).
ORAL PRESENTATIONS
Session 1: Crash risk and pre-crash mechanisms
Assessing the effect of in-vehicle task interactions on attention management in safety-critical events
PDF Proceeding >>
Seppelt, Bobbie1; Seaman, Sean2; Angell, Linda2; Mehler, Bruce1; Reimer, Bryan1
1MIT, Center for Transportation & Logistics, Cambridge, USA; 2Touchstone Evaluations, Inc., Grosse Pointe, USA
Session 2: Effects on driving behaviour and performance
Design concept for a tactile and visual take-over request in a conditional automated vehicle during non-driving related tasks
PDF Proceeding >>
Mueller, Andreas Lars; Ogrizek, Markus; Bier, Lukas; Abendroth, Bettina
Institute of Ergonomics and Human Factors, Department of Mechanical Engineering, TU Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany
Session 2: Effects on driving behaviour and performance
Change the way to manage an in-vehicle menu selection and thereby lower cognitive workload?
PDF Proceeding >>
Pärsch, Nikolai1; Baumann, Martin2; Engeln, Arnd3; Krauß, Lutz W.H.1
1Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG, UI/UX Display & Interaction, Weissach, Germany; 2Ulm University, Institute of Psychology and Education Dept. Human, Ulm, Germany; 3Stuttgart Media University, Interaction Design and User Experience (IDUX), Stuttgart, Germany
Session 4: Moderating factors and perceptions, part 1
Digitalisation in the infotainment: Driver needs and requirements – an explorative approach
PDF Proceeding >>
Paetzold, Anna1; Zarife, Rami1; Wagner, Michael1; Krems, Josef F.2
1Opel Automobile GmbH, EE Core Infotainment & Program Management, Ruesselsheim am Main, Germany; 2Technische Universitat Chemnitz, Cognitive and Engineering Psychology, Chemnitz, Germany
Session 5: Factors mediating pre-crash behaviours
Pre-crash driving behaviour of individuals with and without ADHD
PDF Proceeding >>
Barragan, Daniela; Lee, Yi-Ching
George Mason University, Human Factors, Psychology, Fairfax, USA
Session 7: Measurement of distraction and inattention
Prevalence evaluation and self-regulation of drivers’ secondary task engagement at intersections using naturalistic driving data
PDF Proceeding >>
Ismaeel, Rashed; Hibberd, Daryl; Carsten, Oliver
University of Leeds, Institute for Transport Studies, Leeds, UK
Session 8: Effects on driving behaviour and performance, part 2
Stress and sleepiness in city bus drivers — an explorative study on real roads within the ADAS&ME project
PDF Proceeding >>
Ahlström, Christer; Anund, Anna; Håkansson Kjellman, Erik
VTI, Linköping, Sweden
Session 9: Automation and new forms of mobility, part 1
Influence of motivational aspects and interruption effort of non-driving-related tasks on driver take-over performance in conditionally automated driving
PDF Proceeding >>
Befelein, Dennis; Neukum, Alexandra
Universität Würzburg, IZVW, Veitshöchheim, Germany
Session 9: Automation and new forms of mobility, part 1
What were they thinking? Subjective experiences associated with automation expectation missmatch
PDF Proceeding >>
Gustavsson Pär; Victor Trent; Johansson Joel; Tivesten Emma; Johansson Regina; Ljung Aust Mikael
Volvo Cars, Gothenburg, Sweden
By what hubris?
PDF Proceeding >>
Wachtel, Jerry
The Veridian Group, Inc. Berkeley USA
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
Poster No 4
Under which driving contexts do drivers decide to engage in mobile phone related tasks? An analysis of European naturalistic driving data
PDF Proceeding >>
Morgenstern, Tina1; Naujoks, Frederik2; Krems, Josef F.1; Keinath, Andreas2
1Technische Universität Chemnitz, Cognitive & Engineering Psychology, Chemnitz, Germany; 2BMW Group, München, Germany
Poster No. 5
A preliminary simulator study to investigate the effects of digital mirror failures on drivers’ glance behaviour, situation awareness, criticality and trust
PDF Proceeding >>
Pampel, Sanna; Nofal, Toby; Burnett, Gary
University of Nottingham, Human Factors Research Group, Nottingham, UK
Poster no 6
Efficient monocular point-of-gaze estimation on multiple screens and 3D face tracking for driver behavior analysis
PDF Proceeding >>
Goenetxea, Jon1; Unzueta, Luis1; Elordi, Unai1; Ortega, Juan Diego1; Otaegui, Oihana1
1Vicomtech, Intelligent transport systems and engineering, Donostia/San Sebastián, Spain; 2
Poster No 7
Working towards a meaningful transition of human control over automated driving systems
PDF Proceeding >>
Heikoop, Daniel1; Hagenzieker, Marjan2
1Delft University of Technology, Civil Engineering, Delft, Netherlands; 2Delft University of Technology, Stevinweg 1, Delft, Netherlands
Poster No. 16
Predictors and risk perception of using cell phone while driving among young adult drivers
PDF Proceeding >>
Tabuñar, Scarlett Mia
University of the Philippines-Philippine General Hospital/College of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Quezon City, Philippines