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Journal Article

Citation

Briggs GF, Hole GJ, Turner JAJ. Transp. Res. F Traffic Psychol. Behav. 2018; 57: 36-47.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.trf.2017.08.007

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The impact of attentional set and situation awareness on event detection and reaction times was investigated in 2 simulated driving experiments. Experiment 1: thirty participants viewed and reacted to thirty driving films containing unexpected items which were either driving congruent or incongruent. Group 1 completed the task without distraction; group 2 completed a concurrent conversation task. Experiment 2: thirty participants viewed and reacted to twenty driving films which contained unexpected yet driving relevant events. Half of the participants completed the task without distraction and half completed a concurrent conversation task. Measures of event detection and reaction time were recorded for both experiments. Compared to undistracted participants, dual-taskers reacted to fewer unexpected events; recorded longer reaction times; and reacted to fewer incongruent and peripheral events, suggesting an enduring attentional set for driving. Dual tasking drivers may adopt a strategy of over-reliance on schema-driven processing when attention is shared between tasks.


Language: en

Keywords

Attentional set; Cognitive workload; Driving; Dual tasking; Schemas; Situation awareness

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