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Journal Article

Citation

de Waard D, Westerhuis F, Joling D, Weiland S, Stadtbäumer R, Kaltofen L. Ergonomics 2017; 60(9): 1283-1296.

Affiliation

Traffic Psychology, Neuropsychology , University of Groningen , Grote Kruisstraat 1/2, 9712 TS , Groningen , The Netherlands.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/00140139.2017.1282628

PMID

28092224

Abstract

Cycling with a classic paper map was compared with navigating with a moving map displayed on a smartphone, and with auditory, and visual turn-by-turn route guidance. Spatial skills were found to be related to navigation performance, however only when navigating from a paper or electronic map, not with turn-by-turn (instruction based) navigation. While navigating, 25% of the time cyclists fixated at the devices that present visual information. Navigating from a paper map required most mental effort and both young and older cyclists preferred electronic over paper map navigation. In particular a turn-by-turn dedicated guidance device was favoured. Visual maps are in particular useful for cyclists with higher spatial skills. Turn-by-turn information is used by all cyclists, and it is useful to make these directions available in all devices. Practitioner Summary Electronic navigation devices are preferred over a paper map. People with lower spatial skills benefit most from turn-by-turn guidance information, presented either auditory or on a dedicated device. People with higher spatial skills perform well with all devices. It is advised to keep in mind that all users benefit from turn-by-turn information when developing a navigation device for cyclists.


Language: en

Keywords

Navigation; Spatial ability; ageing; cycling; map

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