Radhakrishnan Swaminathan
Ford Motor Company
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Featured researches published by Radhakrishnan Swaminathan.
IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Vehicles | 2016
Louis Tijerina; Mike Blommer; Reates Curry; Radhakrishnan Swaminathan; Dev S. Kochhar; Walter J. Talamonti
An exploratory study in a moving-base simulator with 34 volunteers examined the effects of automated driving system reduced-confidence notifications on driver response. Reduced confidence in this context is defined as a system performance level that is lower than optimal, yet not so low as to disable the system. The threshold for such a level is essentially a policy decision based on perceived costs and benefits of keeping the automation engaged versus disengaging it. So, a reduced-confidence notification was designed to simply indicate that the driver should be especially vigilant to the increased potential to have to take manual control of the vehicle. An actual manual takeover request from the automated system would require the driver to take manual control of the vehicle. To investigate this, a 32-min highway driving scenario was constructed for this exploratory investigation that included 16 potential loss-of-lane tracking segments within this time frame. Three factors at two levels (low/high) each were crossed and presented in a between-subjects experimental design. One factor was system confidence/competence match, which refers to the ratio of the number of actual automation system failures over the number of reduced-confidence notifications. A second factor was the consequence of automation failure, i.e., drifting toward a busy traffic lane or drifting toward a wide shoulder. The third factor was detectability, or being able to see versus not see why the automated driving system began to drift out-of-lane. Data analyses indicated that automated driving with reduced-confidence notifications was judged to be both useful and acceptable regardless of the manipulated factors. However, the lowest incidence of preemption (i.e., manual takeovers prior to the start of a lane drift) was associated with low automation competence/confidence match and low detectability, regardless of consequences. It was also associated with responding later by some drivers. On the other hand, when the reduced-confidence notifications were perfectly matched with the need to manually takeover, there were fewer instances of delayed driver responses. Results are discussed in terms of “cry wolf” effects.
Archive | 2013
Patrick Joseph Dwan; Kenneth Dorony; Darren Peter Shelcusky; Henry Thomas Ubik; Timothy Brian DeBorde; Radhakrishnan Swaminathan
Archive | 2010
Radhakrishnan Swaminathan; Darren Peter Shelcusky; Timothy Brian DeBorde; Kenneth Dorony; James Eric Kamiske; Patrick Joseph Dwan
Transportation Research Part F-traffic Psychology and Behaviour | 2017
Mike Blommer; Reates Curry; Radhakrishnan Swaminathan; Louis Tijerina; Walter Joseph Talamonti; Dev S. Kochhar
Archive | 2012
Radhakrishnan Swaminathan; Peter Shelcusky Darren; Brian Deborde Timothy; Kenneth Dorony; Eric Kaminske James; Joseph Dwan Patrick
SAE 2015 World Congress & Exhibition | 2015
Louis Tijerina; Michael Blommer; Reates Curry; Radhakrishnan Swaminathan; Dev S. Kochhar; Walter Joseph Talamonti
Applied Ergonomics | 2017
Walter Joseph Talamonti; Louis Tijerina; Mike Blommer; Radhakrishnan Swaminathan; Reates Curry; R. Darin Ellis
Archive | 2016
Kwaku O. Prakah-Asante; Radhakrishnan Swaminathan; Michael Blommer; Reates Curry
Archive | 2011
Timothy Brian DeBorde; Kenneth Dorony; Patrick Joseph Dwan; James Eric Kamiske; Darren Peter Shelcusky; Radhakrishnan Swaminathan
Archive | 2011
Timothy Brian DeBorde; Kenneth Dorony; Patrick Joseph Dwan; James Eric Kamiske; Darren Peter Shelcusky; Radhakrishnan Swaminathan