Search Results - "Petermeijer, S. M."

  • Showing 1 - 5 results of 5
Refine Results
  1. 1

    Comparing spatially static and dynamic vibrotactile take-over requests in the driver seat by Petermeijer, S.M., Cieler, S., de Winter, J.C.F.

    Published in Accident analysis and prevention (01-02-2017)
    “…•Vibrotactile stimuli can effectively convey a take-over request in highly automated driving.•Participants could not reliably recognize directional cues…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  2. 2

    Shared control versus traded control in driving: a debate around automation pitfalls by de Winter, J. C. F., Petermeijer, S. M., Abbink, D. A.

    Published in Ergonomics (03-10-2023)
    “…A major question in human-automation interaction is whether tasks should be traded or shared between human and automation. This work presents reflections-which…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  3. 3

    Replicating five pupillometry studies of Eckhard Hess by de Winter, J.C.F., Petermeijer, S.M., Kooijman, L., Dodou, D.

    Published in International journal of psychophysiology (01-07-2021)
    “…Several papers by Eckhard Hess from the 1960s and 1970s report that the pupils dilate or constrict according to the interest value, arousing content, or mental…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  4. 4

    Take-over requests in highly automated driving: A crowdsourcing survey on auditory, vibrotactile, and visual displays by Bazilinskyy, P., Petermeijer, S.M., Petrovych, V., Dodou, D., de Winter, J.C.F.

    “…•Opinion of 1692 people on take-over requests in highly automated driving.•Multimodal TORs was the most preferred option in high urgency scenarios.•Preferences…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  5. 5

    Is accommodation a confounder in pupillometry research? by Kooijman, L., Dodou, D., Jansen, S.T., Themans, T.S., Russell, J.N.M., Petermeijer, S.M., Doorman, J.R.C., Hablé, J.H., Neubert, D.S., Vos, M.J.C., de Winter, J.C.F.

    Published in Biological psychology (01-03-2021)
    “…•The aim was to uncover to what extent accommodation is a confounder in pupillometry.•Participants had to solve multiplications and look at line drawings with…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article