Supplementary data for the paper 'What attracts the driver’s eye? Attention as a function of task and events'
doi: 10.4121/20254071
This study explores how drivers of an automated vehicle distribute their attention as a function of environmental events and driving task instructions. Twenty participants were asked to monitor pre-recorded videos of a simulated driving trip while their eye movements were recorded using an eye-tracker. The results showed that eye movements are strongly situation-dependent, with areas of interest (windshield, mirrors, and dashboard) attracting attention when events (e.g., passing vehicles) occurred in those areas. Furthermore, the task instructions provided to participants (i.e., speed monitoring or hazard monitoring) affected their attention distribution in an interpretable manner. It is concluded that eye movements while supervising an automated vehicle are strongly ‘top-down’, i.e., based on an expected value. The results are discussed in the context of the development of driver availability monitoring systems.
- 2022-07-11 first online
- 2022-08-08 published, posted
DATA
- 2,903 bytesMD5:
54898045d02fb2e776969437bbfe6546
readme.txt - 3,288,047,964 bytesMD5:
b022304edc69bb947923dcc1bd68bc39
Data_and_scripts.zip - 1,978,769,815 bytesMD5:
60bcd214ea1e263320809ce6f7f09230
EDF files.zip - 1,544,050,049 bytesMD5:
ab51f52703b63cdd330f76936d9d17d2
Videos_with_gaze_overlay.zip -
download all files (zip)
6,810,870,731 bytes unzipped