Author:
Cole Kerstan,Josten Johanna,Seewald Philipp,Roth Christian
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Reference42 articles.
1. Ahlstrom C, Kircher K, Kircher A (2009) Considerations when calculating percent road center from eye movement data in driver distraction monitoring. In: Proceedings of the Fifth international driving symposium on human factors in driver assessment, training and vehicle design. Public Policy Center, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, pp 132–139
2. Alliance of automobile manufacturers: statement of principles, criteria and verification procedures on driver-interactions with advanced in-vehicle information and communication systems. Driver Focus-Telematics Working Group, Washington, DC (2006)
3. Burns P, Harbluk J, Foley JP, Angell L (2010) The importance of task duration and related measures in assessing the distraction potential of in-vehicle tasks. In: Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on automotive user interfaces and interactive vehicular applications. Association for Computing Machinery, New York, NY, pp 12–19
4. Castro S, Cooper J, Strayer D (2016) Validating two assessment strategies for visual and cognitive load in a simulated driving task. In: Proceedings of the human factors and ergonomics society annual meeting, vol 60, issue 1. SAGE Publications, Los Angeles, CA, pp 1899–1903
5. Cogulator Homepage, http://cogulator.io/. Last accessed 2 Feb 2021