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AuthorWondwesen Girma, Mamo
AuthorAlhajyaseen, Wael K.M.
AuthorBrijs, Kris
AuthorDirix, Hélène
AuthorVanroelen, Giovanni
AuthorHussain, Qinaat
AuthorBrijs, Tom
AuthorRoss, Veerle
Available date2024-08-29T07:46:37Z
Publication Date2024-10-31
Publication NameTransportation Research Part F: Traffic Psychology and Behaviour
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.trf.2024.07.030
CitationMamo, W. G., Alhajyaseen, W. K., Brijs, K., Dirix, H., Vanroelen, G., Hussain, Q., ... & Ross, V. (2024). The impact of cognitive load on a lane change task (LCT) among male autistic individuals: A driving simulator study. Transportation Research Part F: Traffic Psychology and Behaviour.‏
ISSN13698478
URIhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1369847824001992
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/58413
AbstractThis study investigated the impact of cognitive load on driving among autistic individuals with the use of an adapted, driving simulator-based, Lane Change Task (LCT). A secondary task was used to induce increasing verbal WM load. A total of 51 male participants, 17 autistic and 34 non-autistic individuals participated in the study. Participants drove the simulator-based LCT without (baseline) and with a three-level auditory-verbal response N-back task (i.e., 0-back,1-back, and 2-back) developed to tax working memory capacity. The included driving parameters were: mean deviation in the lane change path (MDEV), percentage of correct lane changes (PCL) in response to a lane change sign, and lane change initiation (LCI). The percentage of error rate (PER) was included to measure participants’ performance on the secondary task. Dual-task performance of both groups deteriorated with increasing cognitive load, but this effect was more pronounced in the autistic group. Specifically, the performance of both group on MDEV, PCL, and PER suffered from the increasing cognitive load. Nevertheless, neither PCL nor LCI differ between autistic and non-autistic participants. Notably, LCI also deteriorated with increasing cognitive load for non-autistic participants, but not for autistic participants. Similar to previous research, it is suggested that distracted driving should be eliminated as much as possible before occurring in the first place. Specific suggestions for eliminating distraction in autistic drivers are provided.
Languageen
PublisherElsevier
SubjectCognitive load
Lane Change Task
N-back task
Autism
Driving simulator
TitleThe impact of cognitive load on a lane change task (LCT) among male autistic individuals: A driving simulator study
TypeArticle
Volume Number106
dc.accessType Full Text


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