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Article Dans Une Revue Human Factors Année : 2008

Effects of task and eccentricity of the target on detection thresholds in mesopic vision : Implication for road lighting

Résumé

Objective : The aim of this work is to assess how adding a driving-related task affects the detection of objects in peripheral vision, under mesopic conditions. Background : The main index used to assess the quality of road lighting installations refers to simple detection tasks in foveal vision, which raises methodological and practical questions. Method: The experimental design consisted of a three-phase experiment. In the first phase, two groups (control and experimental) performed a peripheral detection task (simple task). Based on these results an individual detection threshold was computed for each participant and eccentricity. Atracking task was performed in Phase 2 for both groups (steering a tracking target along a circuit, on a screen). In the third phase, the control group performed the same task as in Phase 2. The experimental group performed a double task, with a tracking (primary) task and a peripheral detection (secondary)task. Results: The data show an effect of the tracking task and eccentricity on peripheral event detection. The tracking task caused detection performance to decrease from 84.2% to 67.5%, p < .001. Conclusion : The small target visibility model used in road lighting may be improved, taking into account the effects of task and eccentricity on target detection. Application : This study supports improved roadway lighting design by guiding consideration of sign eccentricity and task load.

Domaines

Psychologie Autre

Dates et versions

hal-00419336 , version 1 (23-09-2009)

Identifiants

Citer

Anaïs Mayeur, Roland Bremond, Christian Bastien. Effects of task and eccentricity of the target on detection thresholds in mesopic vision : Implication for road lighting. Human Factors, 2008, 50 (4), pp 712-721. ⟨10.1518/001872008X312260⟩. ⟨hal-00419336⟩
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