Search results for "Time to collision"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Effects of Adjacent Vehicles on Judgments of a Lead Car During Car Following.

2016

Objective: Two experiments were conducted to determine whether detection of the onset of a lead car’s deceleration and judgments of its time to contact (TTC) were affected by the presence of vehicles in lanes adjacent to the lead car. Background: In a previous study, TTC judgments of an approaching object by a stationary observer were influenced by an adjacent task-irrelevant approaching object. The implication is that vehicles in lanes adjacent to a lead car could influence a driver’s ability to detect the lead car’s deceleration and to make judgments of its TTC. Method: Displays simulated car-following scenes in which two vehicles in adjacent lanes were either present or absent. Participa…

AdultEngineeringAutomobile DrivingInjury controlAccident preventionDecelerationMotion PerceptionTime to contactPoison controlHuman Factors and ErgonomicsRear-end collisionCar following050105 experimental psychologyBehavioral NeuroscienceJudgmentTime to collisionHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciences050107 human factorsApplied PsychologySimulationbusiness.industry05 social sciencesTraffic simulationbusinessPsychomotor PerformanceHuman factors
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Allocentric time-to-contact and the devastating effect of perspective

2014

AbstractWith regard to impending object–object collisions, observers may use different sources of information to judge time to contact (tC). We introduced changes of the observer’s vantage point to test among three sets of hypotheses: (1) Observers may use a distance-divided-by-velocity algorithm or, alternatively, elaborated τ-formulae, all of which give exact tC information; (2) observers may use simple τ-formulae (i.e., formulae of the type: visual angle divided by its own first temporal derivative); (3) observers may capitalize on non-τ variables. Hypotheses (2) and (3) imply specific patterns of errors. We presented animated, impending collisions between a moving object and a stationar…

AdultMaleVisual perceptionEvolutionComputer scienceMotion PerceptionTime to contactYoung AdultDiscrimination PsychologicalTime to collisionHumansComputer visionTime-to-collisionτ-variablesAnalysis of VarianceCommunicationbusiness.industryDistance PerceptionVisual perceptionVantage pointPerspective (graphical)Observer (special relativity)Viewing angleSensory SystemsOphthalmologyTime PerceptionPerspectiveFemaleArtificial intelligenceVisual anglebusinessPhotic StimulationVision Research
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Does Affective Content of Sounds Affect Auditory Time-to-collision Estimation?

2021

EstimationTime to collisionApplied MathematicsSpeech recognitionContent (measure theory)PsychologyAffect (psychology)Auditory Perception & Cognition
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Luminance and contrast in visual perception of time to collision.

2013

AbstractMany animals avoid dark, approaching objects seen against a lighter background but show no or weaker reactions to stimuli with inverted contrast. We investigated whether human observers would respond differently to such stimuli in terms of estimated time-to-arrival. We varied luminances of an approaching, light or dark disk and a plain, grey background, and for several conditions, continuously adjusted calibrations so as to keep contrast and/or overall lightness constant. Since no effects were found, we conclude that humans are able to discard luminance and contrast for the task at hand. Generally, however, performance was affected by different, consecutive regimes of feedback: Init…

LightnessAdultMaleVisual perceptionEvolutionmedia_common.quotation_subjectMotion PerceptionContext (language use)LuminanceContrast SensitivityYoung AdultLoomingTime to collisionPsychophysicsContrast (vision)HumansTime-to-collisionLightingmedia_commonCommunicationAnalysis of Variancebusiness.industryContrastMiddle AgedSensory SystemsOphthalmologyLuminanceTime PerceptionFemaleLoomingPsychologyConstant (mathematics)businessAnimal behaviorPhotic StimulationCognitive psychologyVision research
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Effects of distance and eye-height on time-to-contact estimates

2014

Les effets de la distance et du point-de-vue sur le jugement du temps de pre-contact Lors de la realisation d’estimations du temps de pre-contact (time-to-contact TTC), les observateurs utilisent parfois des informations erronees dans leurs jugements, privilegiant la rapidite de decision et d’action au detriment de la precision. Dans ce contexte, nous avons etudie le role de la position de l’observateur par rapport a l’approche du mobile. Cinq experiences ont testees les effets de la distance et de la hauteur des yeux de l’observateur. Le sol pouvait avoir une texture reguliere, irreguliere ou absente. En controlant le temps de visibilite, le TTC et la vitesse du mobile, nous avons evite de…

Time to collisionPhysiologyEye heightPhysiology (medical)Time to contactOrthopedics and Sports MedicinePhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationSociologyHumanitiesMovement & Sport Sciences
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