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Comparing Handheld and Voice-Control Interfaces When Using Mobile Phones and Portable Music Players Friday, December 17 th, 2010 Justin M. Owens Shane B. McLaughlin Jeremy Sudweeks 1
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Introduction 2 Introduction Methodology Procedures Analysis Results Conclusions Background: Increasing number of electronic devices used in vehicles, requiring drivers take eyes off road. Purpose: Determine whether a voice-control system offers driving performance advantages over manual control of mobile phones and music players. Conducted on public, rural 65 mph roadway. Tested 21 regular users of the voice-control system to avoid practice effects; younger (~20’s) and older (~40’s) age groups.
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SYNC Voice-Control System 3 Introduction Methodology Procedures Analysis Results Conclusions System allows voice commands for dialing (“Call John Doe”) & MP3 track selection (“Play track Enter Sandman”), handsfree conversation Also implements text-to-speech text message reception and canned message sending*
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Experimental Design 4 IntroductionMethodology Procedures Analysis Results Conclusions Age Younger Older Modality Handheld SYNC Task (Baseline) Dial Contact Conversation Play Track Between Subjects Within Subjects
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Dependent Variables Task Duration First -> Last task-related movement Task-Related Interior Glances Number of Glances Glance Duration Steering Measures Steering Variance Max Steering Wheel Speed Mental Demand 1-7; Subscale of NASA TLX 5 IntroductionMethodology Procedures Analysis Results Conclusions
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Test Vehicle 2010 Mercury Mariner with SYNC® VTTI Instrumentation Four cameras Cabin audio Accelerometers Gyros Forward radar CAN connectivity for Steering wheel angle Speed Brake on/off 6 IntroductionMethodology Procedures Analysis Results Conclusions
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Handheld Devices Participants used personal mobile phone and portable music players for the handheld trials. Phones: 10 - Numeric physical keyboards 7 - Touch screens 4 - QWERTY keypads Music Players: 12 - Apple iPods with click-wheel 4 - Touch screen (2 iPhones and 1 iPod Touch) 5 - Other interfaces, including 1 Zune 7 IntroductionMethodology Procedures Analysis Results Conclusions
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Testing Procedures 1.9 miles, 65 mph Completed 6 laps One task per leg, after participant reached comfortable speed Two trials each Handheld Dial Handheld Play Handheld Converse Voice Dial Voice Play Voice Converse 8 Introduction MethodologyProcedures Analysis Results Conclusions Task
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Analysis Video analyzed by trained reductionists Separate General Linear Models were conducted for all measures. Post-hoc comparisons conducted using Tukey correction. 9 Introduction Methodology ProceduresAnalysis Results Conclusions Vehicle MATLABMS SQL Video Reduction
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Phone/MP3: Total Interior Glance Duration Handheld Dial, Play had longer total eyes-interior duration than any other condition, including Baseline. 10 Introduction Methodology Procedures AnalysisResults Conclusions
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Phone/MP3: Steering Variance Handheld Dial, Handheld Play higher steering variance than all conditions except each other. Differences not found between Voice and Baseline. Older drivers had more variance. 11 Introduction Methodology Procedures AnalysisResults Conclusions
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Results 12 Introduction Methodology Procedures AnalysisResults Conclusions Handheld dialing and music selection resulted in: Longer time to complete tasks More interior glances Longer total glance duration More steering variability Faster (jerkier) steering corrections All tasks had higher reported mental demand than baseline, but handheld tasks were rated the highest. Voice control and conversation rarely differed from baseline measures.
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Conclusions Voice-control for placing calls and selecting tracks had less impact on driving than manual control. No performance differences were found between voice and manual tasks during conversations. In general, measures during conversation were not found to be different from baseline driving. Older drivers had more difficulty during manual dialing and track selection. All tasks had higher reported mental demand than baseline, but handheld dialing/music were highest Introduction Methodology Procedures Analysis ResultsConclusions 13
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Acknowledgments & References Thanks to Ford Motor Company for funding and test vehicle. John Shutko, point of contact Owens, J.M., McLaughlin, S.B., & Sudweeks, J. (2010). On-Road comparison of driving performance measures when using handheld and voice-control interfaces for mobile phones and portable music players. SAE Int. J. Passeng. Cars – Mech. Syst. 3(1): 734-743. *Owens, J.M., McLaughlin, S.B., & Sudweeks, J. (In Press), Driver performance while text messaging using handheld and in-vehicle systems. Accid. Anal. Prev., doi:10.1016/j.aap.2010.11.019 14
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Questions? 15
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Summary: Comparison to Baseline 16 p < 0.05
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Summary: Voice compared to Handheld 17 p < 0.05
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