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Direction coding using a tactile chair
Authors:de Vries Sjoerd C  van Erp Jan B F  Kiefer Raymond J
Affiliation:a TNO Defence, Security and Safety, Business Unit Human Factors, Kampweg 5, P.O. Box 23, 3769 ZG Soesterberg, Netherlands
b General Motors Corporation, Vehicle Structure and Safety Integration Center, Crash Avoidance System Development, Engineering-East, Mail Code 480111E18, 30200 Mound Road, Warren, MI 48090-9010, USA
Abstract:This laboratory study examined the possibility of using a car seat instrumented with a tactile display to communicate directional information to a driver. A car seat fitted with an 8 × 8 matrix of vibrators embedded in the seat pan was used to code eight different directions. Localization response time and angular accuracy were examined as a function of stimulus direction, presence of a tactile attention cue, temporal pattern, stimulus layout, age, and gender. The mean absolute angular error was 23°, and both localization accuracy and response times were superior for the back left, backward, and back right directions. Of the various temporal pattern/attention cue combinations examined, results favored the relatively fast patterns consisting of vibration bursts of 125 or 250 ms without a centrally located attention cue over 500 ms bursts that were preceded by an attention cue. Observed age and gender effects were relatively modest, suggesting that using tactile cueing to communicate direction is effective across a wide range of users. In addition, the tactile stimulus was detected by more than 90% of the participants under surprise trial conditions. Overall, these results indicate that the tactile chair provides a promising and robust method of providing directional information.
Keywords:Tactile cueing  Traffic  Safety
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