Documento de conferencia
Acceso Abierto

The growing and risky industry of nomadic apps for drivers

Resumen

HCI researchers have worked for decades defining methods and techniques to assess the attention demands of in-vehicle information systems (IVIS). Acceptance test methods have been proposed that must be passed for the safe use of IVIS. Most of these methods require expensive test environments and highly trained personnel for its implementation. This article makes a review of those strategies with focus in the cost and development process phase. In the realm of mobile application ecosystems (aka apps ), guidelines and certification programs exist. Apps must pass them to be considered as automotiveready systems or to integrate with OEM infotainment devices. However, getting into the category of certified applications does not guarantee full compliance with the criteria established by formal methods accepted by the automotive industry and international standards. Moreover, many studies show the high risk of using IVIS while driving, which lead to consider that the current predominant approaches to assess attention demands of automotive apps and to guide IVIS design are not enough. Efficient cost-benefit methods applicable in early phases of application development, as well as context-adaptive interfaces have the potential to contribute to the improvement of safe driving environments.

Palabras clave
IVIS
driver attention
empirical methods
visual demand
cognitive demand
analytical techniques
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Esta obra se publica con la licencia Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (BY 4.0)

item.page.license
Cargando...
Miniatura