Presentations & Reviewed Papers


Below, all presentations, peer-reviewed papers and abstracts from the 3rd International Conference on Driver Distraction and Inattention (DDI 2013) are available.

In the program below, you find two links after every title, where you can click to download the ppt-presentation (pdf), the reviewed paper (pdf) or the abstract (pdf).

The titles marked with O are Oral Only (Non-Paper Presentations) and titles marked with P are Peer-reviewed Papers.
 

PAPERS/ABSTRACTS:

All abstracts and reviewed papers (zip file, 29.73 Mb): Download

Keynote Speaker Abstracts (zip file,  239 KB): Download

DDI2013 Abstract Booklet (pdf, 1.25 Mb): Download

DDI2013 Final Program (pdf, 724 KB): Download

 

 Day 1 - Wednesday September 4th
 

9:00-10:00 Registration & Mingling, Coffee & Sandwich
10:00-10:45

PLENARY SESSION

 

Welcome addresses & Opening Speeches

 10:45-12:00

Keynote Speaker:

Prof Heikki Summala, University of Helsinki, Finland
"Visual guidance, anticipation, and distraction in car driving"

View Presentation   View Abstract

12:00-13:00 Lunch
13:00-14:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS
 

SESSION 1: ATTENTIONAL MECHANISMS I

 

08-P What drives off-road glance durations during multitasking – capacity, practice or strategy?
R Broström, M Ljung Aust, L Wahlberg & L Källgren

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

03-O The Cell Phone Paradox: How do we explain the Differences between Simulator and Naturalistic Driving Research?
J Hickman & R Hanowski

View Presentation   View Abstract

07-O Inhibition of Return Prevails in In-Car Visual Search when Interrupted by Driving
T Kujala

View Presentation   View Abstract

24-O Enhanced Lane Keeping during Driver Distraction: the Effect of Lead Car Presence

N Merat & N Forbes

View Presentation   View Abstract
 

 

SESSION 2: MEASUREMENT I

 

18-P Do drivers prioritise primary driving tasks over secondary tasks within driving simulators? A comparison of simulators of varying fidelity
R A Donkor, G E Burnett & S Sharples

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

20-P Spontaneous vs. gaze shift-induced blinks for assessing driver drowsiness/inattention by Electrooculography
P Ebrahim, W Stolzmann & B Yang

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

19-O BikeSAFE – Analysis of Safety-Critical Events from Naturalistic Cycling Data
J Werneke & M Dozza

View Presentation   View Abstract

35-O Exposure to Secondary Tasks in Germany: Results from Naturalistic Driving Data
B Metz, A Landau, M Just

View Presentation   View Abstract

14:30-15:00 Coffee & Cake
15:00-16:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS
 

SESSION 3: ATTENTIONAL MECHANISMS I

 

28-P Towards understanding mobile device use in Commercial Motor Vehicle Drivers: Do drivers interact as a drowsiness countermeasure?
L M Toole, R J Hanowski, T L Smith-Jackson & W W Winchester III

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

92-P Analysis of the role of inattention in road crashes based on naturalistic on-board safety monitoring data
J Engström, J Werneke, J Bärgman, N Nguyen & B Cook

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

80-O Examining fatigue and inattention in night shift workers during a two-hour post-shift commute
Y Liang, W J Horrey, M E Howard, M L Lee, C Anderson, M S Shreeve, C O’Brien & C A Czeisler

Presentation not available   View Abstract

87-O Safer Glances, Driver Inattention, and Crash Risk: An Investigation Using the SHRP2 Naturalistic Driving Study
T Victor, J Bärgman, M Dozza, H Rootzén, J D Lee, J Engström & M Ljung Aust

View Presentation   View Abstract
 

 

SESSION 4: MEASUREMENT II

 

23-P How do you assess the distraction of in-vehicle information systems? A comparison of occlusion, lane change task and medium-fidelity driving simulator methods
G Burnett, N Neila, E Crundall, D Large, G Lawson, L Skrypchuk & S Thompson

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

71-P A Smart Driving Smartphone Application: Real-World Effects on Driving Performance and Glance Behaviours
S Birrell, M Fowkes & P Jennings

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

10-O Performance assessment under visual, cognitive and manual secondary task load - How to interpret Lane Change Task (LCT) results
A K Huemer & M Vollrath

View Presentation   View Abstract

95-O Distraction and driving: results from the epidemiology task of the ATLAS project: a case-control responsibility study of traffic crash injured drivers interviewed at the emergency room
S Bakiri, C Galéra, L Orriols, M Laborey, B Contrand, R Ribéreau-Gayon, L-R Salmi, C Gabaude, A Fort, B Maury, C Lemercier, M Cours, MP Bouvard & E Lagarde

View Presentation   View Abstract
 

16:30-16:35 Short Break
16:35-17:35

Special Symposium 1: International Harmonized Approaches to Limiting Distraction
Moderators: Peter Burns (Canada), Ruggero Ceci (Sweden)
Panelists: Chris Monk (NHTSA), Scott Pennock (ITU), Michiaki Sekine (NTSEL - Japan), and Christian Heinrich (Daimler)

17:35-17:40 Wrap up Day 1
19:30-22:00

Conference dinner & Entertainment - Restaurant River Café on the pier

 

Day 2 - Thursday September 5th 
 

08:00-08:30 Registration, Mingling & Coffee
08:30-09:45

PLENARY SESSION

 

Welcome address & Keynote Speaker:

Prof Charles Spence, University of Oxford, UK
"Driving by the seat of your pants! A multisensory approach to capturing driver attention"

View Presentation   View Abstract

09:45-10:15 Coffee & Sandwich
10:15-12:00 PARALLEL SESSIONS
 

SESSION 5: MOBILE PHONE DISTRACTION I

 

56-P Impact of Texting on Young Drivers’ Behaviour and Safety on Motorways by the Use of a Driving Simulator
G Yannis, A Laiou, P Papantoniou & C Gkartzonikas

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

68-P Cell Phone Conversation and Automobile Crashes: Relative Risk is Near 1, Not 4
R A Young

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

30-P Does phone interface type influence the distracting effects of text messaging in tunnels?
K L Young, C M Rudin-Brown, C Patten, R Ceci, & M G Lenné

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

33-O Understanding driver self-regulating behavior: how does phone use influence vehicle control in real world?
M Dozza, J Sayer & C Flannagan

View Presentation   View Abstract
 

 

SESSION 6: HMI DESIGN

 

05-P Roadside Advertising Affects Driver Attention and Road Safety
L Herrstedt, P Greibe & P Andersson

Presentation not available   View Reviewed Paper

06-P Can You Ignore It? – Effects of Album Artwork on Driver Distraction
A Lasch & T Kujala

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

22-P Measuring the distraction of alternative list-scrolling techniques when using touchscreen displays in vehicles
D R Large, G E Burnett, E Crundall, G Lawson & S-A De-Kremer

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

82-P The impact of interface modality on police officers’ visual behaviour when using an in-vehicle system
A J Filtness, E Mitsopoulos-Rubens & M G Lenné

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

79-O The Impact of Typeface Design in a Text-Rich Automotive User Interface on Driver Distraction
B Mehler, B Reimer, N Chahine, V Levantovsky, S Matteson & D Gould

View Presentation   View Abstract
 

12:00-13:00 Lunch
12:15-12:45 Video Presentation by Prof John Senders, University of Toronto
13:00-14:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS
 

SESSION 7: MOBILE PHONE DISTRACTION II

 

32-P Effects of Cell Phone Conversations and Device Manipulation on Objective Measures of Driving Performance
J R Sayer, S Bao & D Funkhouser

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

55-P Impact of mobile phone use and music on driver behaviour and safety by the use of a driving simulator
G Yannis, E Papathanasiou, E Postantzi & E Papadimitriou

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

34-O Different Ways to Compensate Distraction while Using a Hands-Free Telephone in a Vehicle
A Landau, B Metz & A Neukum

View Presentation   View Abstract

41-O Deciding to be distracted: Drivers’ strategic choices to interact with the mobile phone
V Huth, H Tattegrain, Y Sanchez & C Brusque

View Presentation   View Abstract
 

 

SESSION 8: MEASUREMENT III

 

12-P A holistic approach for measuring Driver Distraction and Inattention
M Ganzhorn, F Diederichs & H Widlroither

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

67-P Drowsy Driving Increases Severity of Safety-Critical Events and Is Decreased by Cell Phone Conversation
R A Young

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

75-P Development of a Protocol to Classify Drivers’ Emotional Conversation
G M Fitch, R Hanowski, G Burnett & D Crundall

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

48-O Influence of psychological flow on the management of cognitive secondary tasks while driving: an approach comparing subjective and objective mental effort measurement
C Gabaude, V Rolland, A Carrotte, C Jallais, A Fort, B Baracat & G A Michael

View Presentation   View Abstract
 

14:30-15:00 Coffee & Cake
15:00-16:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS
 

SESSION 9: MOBILE PHONE DISTRACTION III

 

76-P Effect of phone conversations on tactical components of the driving task
M-P Bruyas, A Fort & V Lancelle

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

81-O When do drivers use their mobile phone?
M Christoph & N van Nes

View Presentation   View Abstract

93-O The Impact of Hand-Held and Hands-Free Cell Phone Use on Driving Performance and Safety-Critical Event Risk
G M Fitch, F Guo, Y Yang, S Soccolich, M Perez, R Hanowski, J Hankey &T Dingus

View Presentation   View Abstract

62-O Dialling, texting, and reading in real world driving: When do drivers choose to use mobile phones?
E Tivesten & M Dozza

Presentation not available   View Abstract
 

 

SESSION 10: MEASUREMENT IV

 

73-P Estimating Visual Demands in Road Traffic Environments
T Sato, M Akamatsu, A Tanaka, J Hatada, Y Denda & T Ishii

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

78-P Using smart materials to monitor physiological signals of driver’s inattention
H De Rosario, J Solaz, P Gameiro & L Costa

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

46-O Modifying the Lane Change Task – How does increased unpredictability of lane changes affect performance?
T Petzoldt, L Graichen & J F Krems

View Presentation   View Abstract

90-O A method for extracting data for quantification of comfort zone boundaries for intersection
J Bärgman, J Werneke & K Smith

View Presentation   View Abstract

 

16:30-16:35 Short Break
16:35-17:15 PLENARY SESSION
 

Special Symposium 2: Stephanie Binder Memorial Lecture:
Dr. Johan Engström: "US-EU collaboration towards a common conceptualization and taxonomy of driver inattention"

View Presentation

17:15-17:20 Wrap-Up Day 2
17:30-18:30

Technical Tour 1: VTI simulator Sim4 Address: Regnbågsgatan 1 (walking distance)

Technical Tour 2: Smart Eye (17:30 & 18:30) Address: Första Långgatan 28 B (ferry)

 

 Day 3 - Friday September 6th
 

8:00-08:30 Registration, Mingling & Coffee
08:30-09:45 PLENARY SESSION
 

Welcome address & Keynote Speaker: Dr Asaf Degani, General Motors R&D, Israel
"Distraction, Inattention, and Monitoring: Some Observations from Aviation Research"

View Presentation   View Abstract

09:15-10:15 Coffee & Sandwich
10:15-11:45 PARALLEL SESSIONS
 

SESSION 11: PREVENTION- AND MITIGATION TECHNOLOGY

 

02-P BikeCOM: cooperative safety application supporting cyclists and drivers at intersections
P Gustafsson, J Camilo Muñoz, L Lindgren, C‐N Boda & M Dozza

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

15-P Cycling and sounds: the impact of the use of electronic devices on cycling safety
A Stelling-Konczak, M Hagenzieker & B van Wee

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

77-P The DO-IT BEST Feedback Model - Distracted Driver Behaviour Management and Prevention Before, While And After Driving
C A Wege  & T W Victor

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

25-O Evaluation of an Adaptive warning system with help of a mini-FOT
J G Karlsson, A Anund, C Fors, D Hallvig, B Nilsson, O Boström & A Nåbo

View Presentation   View Abstract

94-O VisGuard – Distraction Prevention System
T Kujala

View Presentation   View Abstract
 

 

SESSION 12: DRIVER CHARACTERISTICS

 

44-P Effects of Anger and Sadness on the drivers’ useful visual field: toward a tunnel vision phenomenon?
C Jallais, J Roge, A Fort & C Gabaude

Presentation not available   View Reviewed Paper

52-P Effects of cerebral diseases on driver distraction
D Pavlou, I Beratis, A Liozidou, N Andronas, G Yannis, A Economou & S Papageorgiou

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

72-P Individual Differences in Driving-Related Multitasking
S Mizobuchi, M Chignell, D Canella & M Eizenman

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

26-O The effect of visual and cognitive distraction on the driving performance of older drivers – A driving simulator study
A Cuenen, E M M Jongen, T Brijs, K Brijs, M Lutin, K Van Vlierden & G Wets

View Presentation   View Abstract
 

11:45-12:30 Lunch
12:30-13:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS
 

SESSION 13: PUBLIC POLICY

 

13-P Why Sweden should not do as everybody else does
K Kircher, C Ahlström, N P Gregersen & C Patten

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

17-P Effective Utilization of Naturalistic Data for Driver Distraction Outreach Campaigns
J F Morgan, M Blanco, A Medina & R J Hanowski

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

64-O Driver Distraction Research and Policy: An update from NHTSA
C Monk

View Presentation   View Abstract
 

 

SESSION 14: THEORY, DEFINITION & MODELLING

 

37-P Risk Factors Moderating Driving-related Distraction & Inattention in the Natural Rail Environment
A Naweed & S Rainbird

View Presentation   View Reviewed Paper

50-O Effects of spatial and non-spatial cognitive distraction on drivers' mental representation of spatial and situational information
U Drewitz, F Lethaus & M R K Baumann

Presentation not available   View Abstract

70-O Modeling Safety of Lane Change Maneuvers Based on Driver Gaze and Vehicle Operation Behavior
M Mori, C Miyajima, T Hirayama, N Kitaoka & K Takeda

View Presentation   View Abstract
 

13:30-13:45 Coffee & Cake
13:45-14:45 PLENARY SESSION
 

Special Symposium 3: Priorities for Research and Countermeasures

View Presentation

14:45-15:00 Closing remarks

Pre-Workshop:

Tuesday September 3rd, 13:00-17:00

Workshop on Naturalistic Cycling Analysis


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Download DDI 2013 folder (pdf)