Increasing vehicle automation accentuates the need to consider these dynamics of distraction. The dynamics of distraction also identifies disengagement in driving (e.g., mind wandering) as a substantial challenge that secondary tasks might exacerbate or mitigate. ![]() The dynamics of distraction identifies breakdowns of interruption management as an important contributor to distraction, leading to describe distraction in terms of failures of task timing, switching, and prioritization. This approach largely ignores how drivers come to engage in these tasks and under what conditions they engage and disengage from driving-the dynamics of distraction. ![]() The dominant paradigm guiding this research defines distraction in terms of excessive workload and limited attentional resources. Driver distraction research has a long history, spanning nearly 50 years, but intensifying over the last decade.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |