Driving and activation of mental concepts
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In: Advances in Transportation Studies, Vol. 2007, No. Special issue, 2007, p. 91-96.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Driving and activation of mental concepts
AU - Höger, Rainer
AU - Seidenstücker, Jessica
N1 - Literaturverz. S. 96 ISSN 1824-5463
PY - 2007
Y1 - 2007
N2 - Safe driving depends on how much the driver is able to create an internal representation of the relevant parts of the traffic environment. It is propagated that a series of mental concepts is successively activated during driving. Once a concept is activated, reactions to similar objects are facilitated (priming effect). In order to investigate to which extent activated concepts influence the behaviour while driving, a driving simulatorstudy was performed. A traffic scene was constructed which was presented under three conditions. In two conditions living vs. static objects were presented in order to activate corresponding mental concepts (prime stimuli). After a short period of time an event emerged sharing attributes of the same mental concept (target). In the control condition no related stimulus was shown previously. 23 subjects took part in the experiment each assigned to one of the experimental conditions. Response latencies and braking behaviour data to appearing events were collected. In order to check which stimuli were inspected, eye-movements were recorded via a SMI eye-tracker. The results showed that subjects responded faster to emerging events if corresponding concepts were activated previously. Thus, mental activities during driving can be understood as a response to a sequence of activated concepts triggered by salient stimuli of the traffic scene.
AB - Safe driving depends on how much the driver is able to create an internal representation of the relevant parts of the traffic environment. It is propagated that a series of mental concepts is successively activated during driving. Once a concept is activated, reactions to similar objects are facilitated (priming effect). In order to investigate to which extent activated concepts influence the behaviour while driving, a driving simulatorstudy was performed. A traffic scene was constructed which was presented under three conditions. In two conditions living vs. static objects were presented in order to activate corresponding mental concepts (prime stimuli). After a short period of time an event emerged sharing attributes of the same mental concept (target). In the control condition no related stimulus was shown previously. 23 subjects took part in the experiment each assigned to one of the experimental conditions. Response latencies and braking behaviour data to appearing events were collected. In order to check which stimuli were inspected, eye-movements were recorded via a SMI eye-tracker. The results showed that subjects responded faster to emerging events if corresponding concepts were activated previously. Thus, mental activities during driving can be understood as a response to a sequence of activated concepts triggered by salient stimuli of the traffic scene.
KW - Business psychology
KW - Driving simulator
KW - Eye-movements
KW - Mental representation
KW - Priming
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84887509010&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 2007
SP - 91
EP - 96
JO - Advances in Transportation Studies
JF - Advances in Transportation Studies
SN - 1824-5463
IS - Special issue
ER -