Browsing Psychology by Author "McCarley, Jason S."
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Do wearable devices bring distraction closer to the driver? Comparing smartphones and Google Glass
Wu, Xiaohui; Crager, Kirsten; McCarley, Jason S.; Poynter, Mykala N.; Peng, Kaiping (Wichita State University, 2016-04-29)Distracted driving increases driving errors (e.g., deviation from lane-keeping, inconsistent speed, delayed response-time) and chance crashes. Increased availability and usage of hand-held and wearable devices have exacerbated ... -
Does wearable device bring distraction closer to drivers? Comparing smartphones and Google Glass
He, Jibo; McCarley, Jason S.; Crager, Kirsten; Jadliwala, Murtuza Shabbir; Hua, Lesheng; Huang, Sheng (Elsevier, 2018-07)Background" Head-up and wearable displays, such as Google Glass (TM), are sometimes marketed as safe in-vehicle alternatives to phone-based displays, as they allow drivers to receive messages without eye-off-the-road ... -
Lane keeping under cognitive load: performance changes and mechanisms
He, Jibo; McCarley, Jason S.; Kramer, Arthur F. (Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, 2014-03)Objective: A pair of simulated driving experiments studied the effects of cognitive load on drivers’ lane-keeping performance. Background: Cognitive load while driving often reduces the variability of lane position. ... -
Texting while driving using Google Glass (TM): Promising but not distraction-free
He, Jibo; Choi, William; McCarley, Jason S.; Chaparro, Barbara S.; Wang, Chun (Elsevier B.V., 2015-08)Texting while driving is risky but common. This study evaluated how texting using a Head-Mounted Display, Google Glass, impacts driving performance. Experienced drivers performed a classic car-following task while using ...