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Article Dans Une Revue Accident Analysis & Prevention Année : 2015

Do mental workload and presence experienced when driving a real car predispose drivers to simulator sickness? An exploratory study

Résumé

This study is aimed at determining whether the simulator sickness (SS) experienced by some drivers is influenced by psychological factors, such as cognitive solicitation, affective factors and a feeling of presence. We also wished to determine whether SS is caused by an individual reaction to the virtual environment (VE) itself or can be attributed to a more general personal predisposition. For this reason, we considered three conditions: driving a simulator, driving one’s own vehicle and driving a school-owned vehicle. Fourteen expert drivers participated in the study. Each drove under a different experimental condition and then responded to various questionnaires (SSQ, NASA-TLX and QPF). Our results showed that it is possible to identify at least three sources of explanation of why some people are more liable to feel sick in a driving simulator.

Domaines

Psychologie
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Dates et versions

hal-01110953 , version 1 (29-01-2015)

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Citer

Isabelle Milleville-Pennel, Camilo Charron. Do mental workload and presence experienced when driving a real car predispose drivers to simulator sickness? An exploratory study. Accident Analysis & Prevention, 2015, 74, pp.192-202. ⟨10.1016/j.aap.2014.10.021⟩. ⟨hal-01110953⟩
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