Search Results - "Cooper, Joel M"

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  1. 1

    Assessing Cognitive Distraction in the Automobile by Strayer, David L., Turrill, Jonna, Cooper, Joel M., Coleman, James R., Medeiros-Ward, Nathan, Biondi, Francesco

    Published in Human factors (01-12-2015)
    “…Objective: The objective was to establish a systematic framework for measuring and understanding cognitive distraction in the automobile. Background: Driver…”
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    Journal Article
  2. 2

    The smartphone and the driver's cognitive workload: A comparison of Apple, Google, and Microsoft's intelligent personal assistants by Strayer, David L, Cooper, Joel M, Turrill, Jonna, Coleman, James R, Hopman, Rachel J

    “…The goal of this research was to examine the impact of voice-based interactions using 3 different intelligent personal assistants (Apple's , Google's for…”
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    Journal Article
  3. 3

    Text Messaging During Simulated Driving by Drews, Frank A., Yazdani, Hina, Godfrey, Celeste N., Cooper, Joel M., Strayer, David L.

    Published in Human factors (01-10-2009)
    “…Objective: This research aims to identify the impact of text messaging on simulated driving performance. Background: In the past decade, a number of on-road,…”
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  4. 4

    Dynamic Workload Measurement and Modeling: Driving and Conversing by Castro, Spencer C., Heathcote, Andrew, Cooper, Joel M., Strayer, David L.

    “…Tillman et al. (2017) used evidence-accumulation modeling to ascertain the effects of a conversation (either with a passenger or on a hands-free cell phone) on…”
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  5. 5

    No Difference in Arousal or Cognitive Demands Between Manual and Partially Automated Driving: A Multi-Method On-Road Study by Lohani, Monika, Cooper, Joel M, Erickson, Gus G, Simmons, Trent G, McDonnell, Amy S, Carriero, Amanda E, Crabtree, Kaedyn W, Strayer, David L

    Published in Frontiers in neuroscience (10-06-2021)
    “…Partial driving automation is not always reliable and requires that drivers maintain readiness to take over control and manually operate the vehicle. Little is…”
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  6. 6

    Assessing the visual and cognitive demands of in-vehicle information systems by Strayer, David L., Cooper, Joel M., Goethe, Rachel M., McCarty, Madeleine M., Getty, Douglas J., Biondi, Francesco

    “…Background New automobiles provide a variety of features that allow motorists to perform a plethora of secondary tasks unrelated to the primary task of…”
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  7. 7

    Reliable but multi-dimensional cognitive demand in operating partially automated vehicles: implications for real-world automation research by Lohani, Monika, Cooper, Joel M., McDonnell, Amy S., Erickson, Gus G., Simmons, Trent G., Carriero, Amanda E., Crabtree, Kaedyn W., Strayer, David L.

    “…The reliability of cognitive demand measures in controlled laboratory settings is well-documented; however, limited research has directly established their…”
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  8. 8

    Age-Related Differences in the Cognitive, Visual, and Temporal Demands of In-Vehicle Information Systems by Cooper, Joel M., Wheatley, Camille L., McCarty, Madeleine M., Motzkus, Conner J., Lopes, Clara L., Erickson, Gus G., Baucom, Brian R. W., Horrey, William J., Strayer, David L.

    Published in Frontiers in psychology (03-06-2020)
    “…In-vehicle information systems (IVIS) refer to a collection of features in vehicles that allow motorists to complete tasks (often unrelated to driving) while…”
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  9. 9

    Driver behavior while using Level 2 vehicle automation: a hybrid naturalistic study by Cooper, Joel M., Crabtree, Kaedyn W., McDonnell, Amy S., May, Dominik, Strayer, Sean C., Tsogtbaatar, Tushig, Cook, Danielle R., Alexander, Parker A., Sanbonmatsu, David M., Strayer, David L.

    “…Vehicle automation is becoming more prevalent. Understanding how drivers use this technology and its safety implications is crucial. In a 6–8 week naturalistic…”
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  10. 10

    Effects of Simulator Practice and Real-World Experience on Cell-Phone—Related Driver Distraction by Cooper, Joel M., Strayer, David L.

    Published in Human factors (01-12-2008)
    “…Objective: Our research examined the effects of practice on cell-phone—related driver distraction. Background: The driving literature is ambiguous as to…”
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  11. 11

    Multitasking Induced Contextual Blindness by Cooper, Joel M, Strayer, David L

    Published in Human factors (23-08-2024)
    “…To examine the impact of secondary task performance on contextual blindness arising from the suppression and masking of temporal and spatial sequence learning…”
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  12. 12

    This Is Your Brain on Autopilot 2.0: The Influence of Practice on Driver Workload and Engagement During On-Road, Partially Automated Driving by McDonnell, Amy S., Crabtree, Kaedyn W., Cooper, Joel M., Strayer, David L.

    Published in Human factors (01-08-2024)
    “…Objective This on-road study employed behavioral and neurophysiological measurement techniques to assess the influence of six weeks of practice driving a Level…”
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  13. 13

    The power and sensitivity of four core driver workload measures for benchmarking the distraction potential of new driver vehicle interfaces by McDonnell, Amy S., Imberger, Kelly, Poulter, Christopher, Cooper, Joel M.

    “…•Evaluated the sensitivity of four common driver workload measures.•Data were collected on the road while drivers completed secondary tasks.•Task interaction…”
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  14. 14

    The Persistence of Distraction: The Hidden Costs of Intermittent Multitasking by Strayer, David L., Castro, Spencer C., Turrill, Jonna, Cooper, Joel M.

    “…We examined the hidden costs of intermittent multitasking. Participants performed a pursuit-tracking task (Experiment 1) or drove in a high-fidelity driving…”
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  15. 15

    This Is Your Brain on Autopilot: Neural Indices of Driver Workload and Engagement During Partial Vehicle Automation by McDonnell, Amy S., Simmons, Trent G., Erickson, Gus G., Lohani, Monika, Cooper, Joel M., Strayer, David L.

    Published in Human factors (01-11-2023)
    “…Objective This research explores the effect of partial vehicle automation on neural indices of mental workload and visual engagement during on-road driving…”
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  16. 16

    Hierarchical Control and Driving by Medeiros-Ward, Nathan, Cooper, Joel M., Strayer, David L.

    “…We manipulated primary task predictability and secondary task workload in the context of driving an automobile. As the driving task became less predictable (by…”
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  17. 17

    The Impact of Eye Movements and Cognitive Workload on Lateral Position Variability in Driving by Cooper, Joel M., Medeiros-Ward, Nathan, Strayer, David L.

    Published in Human factors (01-10-2013)
    “…Objective: The objective of this work was to understand the relationship between eye movements and cognitive workload in maintaining lane position while…”
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  18. 18

    Automated driving experiences, attention, and intentions following extensive on-road usage of a level 2 automation vehicle by Sanbonmatsu, David M., Crabtree, Kaedyn W., McDonnell, Amy S., Cooper, Joel M., Strayer, David L.

    Published in Journal of safety research (01-09-2024)
    “…•On-road study of level 2 automated driving experience and attention of novice users.•Automation reportedly made driving more enjoyable and less…”
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  19. 19

    Visual and Cognitive Demands of CarPlay, Android Auto, and Five Native Infotainment Systems by Strayer, David L., Cooper, Joel M., McCarty, Madeleine M., Getty, Douglas J., Wheatley, Camille L., Motzkus, Conner J., Goethe, Rachel M., Biondi, Francesco, Horrey, William J.

    Published in Human factors (01-12-2019)
    “…Objective: The present research compared and contrasted the workload associated with using in-vehicle information systems commonly available in five different…”
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