Autor:
Riener, Andreas
Sensor-Actuator Supported Implicit Interaction in Driver Assistance Systems
2010. xxviii, 287 pp. With 79 Fig. and 14 Tab. Softc.
ISBN: 978-3-8348-0963-6
Lieferbar, versandfertig in 1-2 Werktagen
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Das Buch
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The research trend in the automotive domain is clearly moving from mechanically controlled to computer assisted systems for both vehicle handling and comfort functions. Driver Assistance Systems (DAS), originally integrated to decrease the cognitive load and to increase the comfort for the driver, cause additional workload and stress for the driver, and as a consequence may distract from the main activity of driving and lead to traffic accidents.
Andreas Riener studies the influence of implicit interaction using vibro-tactile actuators, invisibly and unobtrusively embedded into the car seat, as additional sensory channels for car-driver feedback, and pressure sensor mats, integrated into the seat for implicit information transmission from the driver toward the vehicle. The results of the experiments, e.g. implicit driver identification or activity recognition, vibro-tactile activity notification, motivate to use both vibro-tactile notifications and pressure sensor images to improve vehicle handling performance and to decrease the driver’s cognitive workload.
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Aus dem Inhalt
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Perception - driver expression - perception and articulation - vibro-tactile articulation and presentation - the driver as the weak point in interaction - dricver activity and notification demands - advanced driver assistance systems - vibro-tactile interfaces
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Zielgruppe
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Researchers and students from the fields of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) and/or pervasive computing, especially with an interest in novel interface design and user studies as well as developers of interfaces, particularly automobile interface designers.
- Autor | Herausgeber
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Dr. Andreas Riener is a research and teaching assistant at the Institute for Pervasive Computing, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria, and is employed as a researcher at the Research Institute for Pervasive Computing (RIPE) in Hagenberg, Austria.
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