Head-up Displays Improve Drivers' Performance and Subjective Perceptions with the In-Vehicle Gesture Interaction System

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Date

2024-01-01, 2024-08-08

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Abstract

In-vehicle infotainment systems can cause various distractions, increasing the risk of car accidents. To address this problem, mid-air gesture systems have been introduced. This study investigated the potential of a novel interface that integrates a Head-Up Display (HUD) with auditory displays (spearcons: compressed speech) in a gesture-based menu navigation system to minimize visual distraction and improve driving and secondary task performance. The experiment involved 24 participants who navigated through 12 menu items using mid-air gestures while driving on a simulated road under four conditions: HUD (with, without spearcons) and Head-Down Display (HDD) (with, without spearcons). Results showed that the HUD condition significantly outperformed the HDD condition in participants’ level 1 situation awareness, perceived workload, menu navigation performance, and system usability. However, there were trade-offs on visual fixation duration on the menu, and lane deviation. These findings will guide future research in developing safer and more effective HUD-supported in-vehicle gesture interaction systems.

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Keywords

Gesture interaction, in-vehicle infotainment systems, heads-up display, auditory display, spearcons, visual distraction

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