Investigation of haptic feedback in the driver seat

Fels, S., Hausch, R., and Tang, A. (2006). Investigation of haptic feedback in the driver seat. In Intelligent Transportation Systems Conference, 2006. ITSC'06. IEEE, 584--589.

Abstract

We explore the impact of tilting the driver's seat according to the relative distance and velocity to objects outside the car using a haptic feedback chair in a driving simulator. We found that drivers perform best when (1) the seat tilts according to relative distance (vs. velocity) to objects outside the car and (2) the seat tilts forward (vs. backward) when the driver gets closer to a car in front of them. We also found that when visually and cognitively distracted, drivers perform better using haptic feedback than without. Our results suggest that adding haptic feedback to the car seat may improve driving safety and enjoyment by enhancing the driving experience

Materials

PDF File (http://hcitang.org/papers/2006-itsc2006-haptic-seat.pdf)
DOI (http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ITSC.2006.1706804)

Keywords

driver seat; driving safety; driving simulator; haptic feedback chair

BibTeX

@inproceedings{fels2006investigation,
  pdfurl = {http://hcitang.org/papers/2006-itsc2006-haptic-seat.pdf},
  year = {2006},
  type = {conference},
  title = {Investigation of haptic feedback in the driver seat},
  pages = {584--589},
  organization = {IEEE},
  keywords = {driver seat; driving safety; driving simulator; haptic feedback chair},
  doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ITSC.2006.1706804},
  date-modified = {2014-01-17 05:14:19 +0000},
  booktitle = {Intelligent Transportation Systems Conference, 2006. ITSC'06. IEEE},
  author = {Fels, Sidney and Hausch, Robert and Tang, Anthony},
  abstract = {We explore the impact of tilting the driver's seat according to the
relative distance and velocity to objects outside the car using a haptic feedback
chair in a driving simulator. We found that drivers perform best when (1) the
seat tilts according to relative distance (vs. velocity) to objects outside
the car and (2) the seat tilts forward (vs. backward) when the driver gets
closer to a car in front of them. We also found that when visually and cognitively
distracted, drivers perform better using haptic feedback than without. Our
results suggest that adding haptic feedback to the car seat may improve driving
safety and enjoyment by enhancing the driving experience},
}