Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
709961 IFAC Proceedings Volumes 2010 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Cooperative-Adaptive Cruise Control (C-ACC) systems are seen as a potential technology to increase capacity and safety within Intelligent Traffic Systems (ITS). In this research, interaction mediums of the driver for both advisory and autonomous platforms are investigated. Two different advisory and automated frameworks with three different interfaces including a visual dashboard display, a Head Up Display (HUD) and a haptic gas pedal are studied. It is shown that the designed advisory interfaces do not result in significant improvement in velocity control but subjective evaluation indicates a preference for haptic feedback. For the autonomous cooperative cruise control, the designed HUD interface results in about 50% reduction of undesired human intervention which is significant for some conditions. Next versions of the HMI systems will be tested with more subjects, more scenarios and longer test durations to gain more insight into variation and accommodation.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Computational Mechanics