08:30 - 10:00
Talk Session VI
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08:30 - 10:00
Wed-HS1-Talk VI-
Wed-Talk VI-
Room: HS1
Chair/s:
Moritz Held, Jochem Rieger
Both psychological experimentation and (cognitive) models are established approaches to evaluate the safety, ergonomics, and usability of Human-machine-interactions in real-life scenarios. However, they often excel at different stages in the scientific process. While psychological experiments are, for example, often used to critically assess the influence of cognitive processes in real-life environments, (cognitive) models are best used to inform how said processes influence or interact with the task environment. In real-life scenarios, the interplay between models and experimentation can be especially helpful due to the challenges that arise when evaluating these models, for example, the individual differences between humans. In this symposium, we bring together research from both experimental psychologists as well as (cognitive) modelers to foster an integrated evaluation of applied research environments that combines these methods. In the first talk, Biebl & Bengler will present their work on modeling intersection-related collision due to impaired visual ability. The second talk by Russwinkel will discuss anticipatory models for real-life decisions. The third talk summarizes an evidence accumulation model of a driving task. The fourth talk by Baumann et al. showcases several examples in modeling cooperation in traffic while highlighting the potential difficulties that can arise in the process. The last talk by Held et al. presents an ACT-R model, which attempts to explain an often-observed behavior of decreased driving performance in mundane driving environments and why this effect can be reversed by a low-effort mental task. The symposium will end with a moderated discussion between the speakers and the audience.
Interaction behaviour in traffic: Experimental results and challenges for modelling
Wed-HS1-Talk VI-04
Presented by: Martin Baumann
Martin Baumann 1, Linda Miller 1, Tanja Stoll 2
1 Ulm University, 2 ZHAW Zürcher Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften
The introduction of automated vehicles (Avs) into the traffic system requires that these vehicles are able to communicate with other road users just as human road users do, especially in situations where the road users’ trajectories interfere with each other. In such situations the same space is claimed at the same time by at least two road users, in our case two drivers or a human driver and an automated vehicle. Such a situation occurs, for example, when the two vehicles approach a narrow passage from each side and there is no priority regulation. Another such situation occurs when a driver on the right lane of a highway intends to change the lane to the left and there is another vehicle approaching from behind. In a series of empirical studies in the lab and in driving simulators we investigated how humans interact with each other in such situations, which aspects of the driving behaviour are used and perceived as signals of which intentions and with what kind of expectations humans enter such interference situations. Based on these empirical results the next step is integrate these results into (computational) cognitive models of interaction and communication between road users, specifically drivers. Being only at the beginning of this modelling approach we will concentrate on current challenges that need to be addressed for successfully building (computational) cognitive models of such a complex real-world task as driving and even more the interaction of drivers in complex traffic situations.
Keywords: traffic psychology, transportation human factors, interaction, cooperation, cognitive modelling