Measuring Neuromuscular Control Dynamics During Car Following With Continuous Haptic Feedback

被引:73
作者
Abbink, David A. [1 ]
Mulder, Mark [2 ]
van der Helm, Frans C. T. [1 ]
Mulder, Max [2 ]
Boer, Erwin R. [3 ]
机构
[1] Delft Univ Technol, Dept BioMech Engn, Fac Mech Maritime & Mat Engn 3ME, NL-2628 CD Delft, Netherlands
[2] Delft Univ Technol, Fac Aerosp Engn, NL-2629 HS Delft, Netherlands
[3] Entropy Control Inc, San Diego, CA 92122 USA
来源
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SYSTEMS MAN AND CYBERNETICS PART B-CYBERNETICS | 2011年 / 41卷 / 05期
关键词
Car following; cybernetics; driver support systems; haptic feedback; human-machine systems; neuromuscular control; shared control; HUMAN ANKLE STIFFNESS; SYSTEM; IDENTIFICATION; AUTOMATION; COMPONENTS; STRETCH; JOINT; MODEL;
D O I
10.1109/TSMCB.2011.2120606
中图分类号
TP [自动化技术、计算机技术];
学科分类号
0812 ;
摘要
In previous research, a driver support system that uses continuous haptic feedback on the gas pedal to inform drivers of the separation to the lead vehicle was developed. Although haptic feedback has been previously shown to be beneficial, the influence of the underlying biomechanical properties of the driver on the effectiveness of haptic feedback is largely unknown. The goal of this paper is to experimentally determine the biomechanical properties of the ankle-foot complex (i.e., the admittance) while performing a car-following task, thereby separating driver responses to visual feedback from those to designed haptic feedback. An experiment was conducted in a simplified fixed-base driving simulator, where ten participants were instructed to follow a lead vehicle, with and without the support of haptic feedback. During the experiment, the lead vehicle velocity was perturbed, and small stochastic torque perturbations were applied to the pedal. Both perturbations were separated in the frequency domain to allow the simultaneous estimation of frequency response functions of both the car-following control behavior and the biomechanical admittance. For comparison to previous experiments, the admittance was also estimated during three classical motion control tasks (resist forces, relax, and give way to forces). The main experimental hypotheses were that, first, the haptic feedback would encourage drivers to adopt a "give way to force task," resulting in larger admittance compared with other tasks and, second, drivers needed less control effort to realize the same car-following performance. Time-and frequency-domain analyses provided evidence for both hypotheses. The developed methodology allows quantification of the range of admittances that a limb can adopt during vehicle control or while performing a variety of motion control tasks. It thereby allows detailed computational driver modeling and provides valuable information on how to design and evaluate continuous haptic feedback systems.
引用
收藏
页码:1239 / 1249
页数:11
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