Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
11028832 Accident Analysis & Prevention 2018 11 Pages PDF
Abstract
Drivers often used a gaze-leads-steering strategy, glancing at the road ahead 200-600 ms before executing steering corrections. However, when the targets were less eccentric (requiring a smaller change in glance direction relative to the road ahead), the reverse strategy, in which glances to the road ahead followed steering corrections with 0-400 ms latency, was clearly present. The observed use of strategies can be interpreted in terms of predictive processing: The gaze-leads-steering strategy is driven by the need to update the visual information and is therefore modulated by the quality/quantity of peripheral information. Implications for steering models are discussed.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Health and Safety
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