Understanding hazard perception in filmed and simulated environments

Each year millions of people around the world are killed or injured due to being involved in collisions while driving on the roads, with young and inexperienced drivers most likely to be killed or injured. Numerous studies have found a link between the likelihood of a driver being involved in a col...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Runham, Patrick
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36163/
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author Runham, Patrick
author_facet Runham, Patrick
author_sort Runham, Patrick
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Each year millions of people around the world are killed or injured due to being involved in collisions while driving on the roads, with young and inexperienced drivers most likely to be killed or injured. Numerous studies have found a link between the likelihood of a driver being involved in a collision and their hazard perception (HP) ability, with young and inexperienced drivers having inferior HP abilities compared to older and more experienced drivers. This thesis presents a series of studies that investigate the factors that affect HP performance as well as comparing different HP testing methods. The traditional video-based method is explored as well as new methods utilising a high-fidelity driving simulator (used as an analogue of real-world driving) in order to see if there are ways of making HP testing more representative of detecting and responding to hazards while driving on the road. This thesis also explores the use of functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIR) as a portable and flexible means of measuring dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) activity during driving. Comparisons between video-based HP testing (similar to that used in the UK HP test) and simulator-based HP testing revealed significant differences in psychophysiological and behavioural responses, indicating that video-based methods may not be representative of HP while driving on the road. fNIR was found to primarily measure task workload and to be a reliable means of recording DLPFC activity across a range of different driving tasks. The fNIR results also demonstrated that DLPFC was similar when performing a simulator-based HP test and a hybrid simulator method using simulation replays, suggesting that introducing elements of driving simulation may help bridge the gap between current video-based HP testing methods and HP while driving on the road. These findings have important implications for the theoretical and practical aspects of HP testing and the use of fNIR in driving research.
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spelling nottingham-361632025-02-28T11:50:45Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36163/ Understanding hazard perception in filmed and simulated environments Runham, Patrick Each year millions of people around the world are killed or injured due to being involved in collisions while driving on the roads, with young and inexperienced drivers most likely to be killed or injured. Numerous studies have found a link between the likelihood of a driver being involved in a collision and their hazard perception (HP) ability, with young and inexperienced drivers having inferior HP abilities compared to older and more experienced drivers. This thesis presents a series of studies that investigate the factors that affect HP performance as well as comparing different HP testing methods. The traditional video-based method is explored as well as new methods utilising a high-fidelity driving simulator (used as an analogue of real-world driving) in order to see if there are ways of making HP testing more representative of detecting and responding to hazards while driving on the road. This thesis also explores the use of functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIR) as a portable and flexible means of measuring dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) activity during driving. Comparisons between video-based HP testing (similar to that used in the UK HP test) and simulator-based HP testing revealed significant differences in psychophysiological and behavioural responses, indicating that video-based methods may not be representative of HP while driving on the road. fNIR was found to primarily measure task workload and to be a reliable means of recording DLPFC activity across a range of different driving tasks. The fNIR results also demonstrated that DLPFC was similar when performing a simulator-based HP test and a hybrid simulator method using simulation replays, suggesting that introducing elements of driving simulation may help bridge the gap between current video-based HP testing methods and HP while driving on the road. These findings have important implications for the theoretical and practical aspects of HP testing and the use of fNIR in driving research. 2016-10-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36163/1/Understanding%20HP%20in%20Filmed%20and%20Simulated%20Environments.pdf Runham, Patrick (2016) Understanding hazard perception in filmed and simulated environments. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. hazard perception road accidents visual perception
spellingShingle hazard perception
road accidents
visual perception
Runham, Patrick
Understanding hazard perception in filmed and simulated environments
title Understanding hazard perception in filmed and simulated environments
title_full Understanding hazard perception in filmed and simulated environments
title_fullStr Understanding hazard perception in filmed and simulated environments
title_full_unstemmed Understanding hazard perception in filmed and simulated environments
title_short Understanding hazard perception in filmed and simulated environments
title_sort understanding hazard perception in filmed and simulated environments
topic hazard perception
road accidents
visual perception
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36163/