1. The Effects of Severe Visual Challenges on Steering Performance in Visually Healthy Young Drivers
- Author
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Richard A. Tyrrell, Talissa A. Frank, and Johnell O. Brooks
- Subjects
Adult ,Automobile Driving ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Light ,genetic structures ,Vision Disorders ,Visual Acuity ,Poison control ,Audiology ,Severity of Illness Index ,Luminance ,Contrast Sensitivity ,Night vision ,Field size ,medicine ,Humans ,Computer vision ,Motor skill ,Analysis of Variance ,business.industry ,Driving simulator ,eye diseases ,Additional research ,Visual field ,Ophthalmology ,Artificial intelligence ,Visual Fields ,Psychology ,business ,Psychomotor Performance ,Optometry - Abstract
This article reports on two studies that explored the effects of severe visual challenges on steering performance in visually healthy young drivers. The experiments explored the extent to which induced blur, educed luminance, and reduced visual fields affect drivers' steering performance in a driving simulator. In the first experiment, 10 young drivers (median age 21.2 years) drove at approximately 89 km/h (55 mph) along a curvy roadway while being exposed to blur, luminance, and visual field manipulations. In the second experiment, a different group of 10 young drivers (median age 18.5 years) drove while exposed to 7 visual field sizes (1.7 to 150 degrees). Steering was shown to be sensitive to a reduced field size but not to the blur and luminance challenges. Acuity, on the other hand, was sensitive to the blur and luminance challenges but not to reduced field size. The authors conclude that in healthy young drivers, steering performance is remarkably robust to severe blur and to extremely low luminances. Thus steering performance is preserved at night even when the ability to recognize objects and hazards is not. The authors call for additional research to investigate the other hypothesis hinted at by these studies: that drivers fail to understand the extent to which their visual abilities are degraded at night.
- Published
- 2005
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