Description
Safe headway learning plays a core role in driving education. Traditional safe headway education just use the oral and literal methods to educate drivers the concept of safe headway time, while with the limitation of combining drivers subject and situational domains for drivers to learn. This study investigated that whether using ego-moving metaphor to embody driver's self-awareness can help to solve this problem. This study used multiple treatments (ego-moving and time-moving instruction of safe time headway) and controls with pretest experimental design to investigate the embody self-awareness effect in a car-following task. Drivers (N=40) were asked to follow a lead car at a 2-seconds safe time headway. Results found that using embodied-based instructions in safe headway learning can help to improve driver's headway time accuracy and performance stability in the car-following task, which supports the hypothesis that using embodied-based instructions help to facilitate safe headway learning. However, there are still some issues needed to be solved using embodied-based instructions for the drivers' safe headway education. This study serves as a new method for the safe headway education while providing empirical evidence for the embodied theories and their applications.
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Details
Title
- Investigating the embodied effect in drivers' safe headway learning
Contributors
- Lu, Longteng (Author)
- Craig, Scotty D. (Thesis advisor)
- Gray, Robort (Committee member)
- Song, Hyunjin (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2016
Subjects
- Cognitive Psychology
- Educational technology
- Cognitive Psychology
- Concept learning
- Driving safety
- Embodied Metaphor
- Traffic safety
- Motor vehicle drivers--Psychology.
- Motor vehicle drivers
- Motor vehicle driving--Psychological aspects.
- Motor vehicle driving
- Motor vehicle driving--Safety measures.
- Motor vehicle driving
Resource Type
Collections this item is in
Note
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thesisPartial requirement for: M.S., Arizona State University, 2016
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bibliographyIncludes bibliographical references (pages 42-45)
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Field of study: Applied psychology
Citation and reuse
Statement of Responsibility
by Shaowen Lu