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Evaluation of the Effectiveness of a Gaze-Based Training Intervention on Latent Hazard Anticipation Skills for Young Drivers: a Driving Simulator Study

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Date

2018

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Mdpi

Open Access Color

GOLD

Green Open Access

Yes

OpenAIRE Downloads

0

OpenAIRE Views

1

Publicly Funded

No
Impulse
Top 10%
Influence
Average
Popularity
Top 10%

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Journal Issue

Abstract

A PC-based training program (Road Awareness and Perception Training or RAPT; Pradhan et al., 2009), proven effective for improving young novice drivers' hazard anticipation skills, did not fully maximize the hazard anticipation performance of young drivers despite the use of similar anticipation scenarios in both, the training and the evaluation drives. The current driving simulator experiment examined the additive effects of expert eye movement videos following RAPT training on young drivers' hazard anticipation performance compared to video-only and RAPT-only conditions. The study employed a between-subject design in which 36 young participants (aged 18-21) were equally and randomly assigned to one of three experimental conditions, were outfitted with an eye tracker and drove four unique scenarios on a driving simulator to evaluate the effect of treatment on their anticipation skills. The results indicate that the young participants that viewed the videos of expert eye movements following the completion of RAPT showed significant improvements in their hazard anticipation ability (85%) on the subsequent experimental evaluation drives compared to those young drivers who were only exposed to either the RAPT training (61%) or the Video (43%). The results further imply that videos of expert eye movements shown immediately after RAPT training may improve the drivers' anticipation skills by helping them map and integrate the spatial and tactical knowledge gained in a training program within dynamic driving environments involving latent hazards.

Description

Palmer, Dakota/0000-0002-4876-2819

Keywords

Hazard Anticipation, Training, Driving Simulation, Eye Movement, Young Driver, Eye movement, driving simulation, Medicine (General), Cognition and Perception, training, Driving simulation, Systems Engineering, T55-55.3, Cognitive Psychology, Young driver, Hazard anticipation, Environmental Public Health, young driver, R5-920, hazard anticipation; training; driving simulation; eye movement; young driver, Industrial safety. Industrial accident prevention, Training, hazard anticipation, eye movement

Fields of Science

05 social sciences, 0502 economics and business

Citation

Yamani, Yusuke; Bicaksiz, Pinar; Palmer, Dakota B.; et al. (2018). Evaluation of the Effectiveness of a Gaze-Based Training Intervention on Latent Hazard Anticipation Skills for Young Drivers: A Driving Simulator Study, Safety, 4(2).

WoS Q

Q3

Scopus Q

Q2
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OpenCitations Citation Count
10

Source

Safety

Volume

4

Issue

2

Start Page

End Page

PlumX Metrics
Citations

CrossRef : 11

Scopus : 13

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 19

SCOPUS™ Citations

13

checked on Feb 23, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

10

checked on Feb 23, 2026

Page Views

2

checked on Feb 23, 2026

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2.44292133

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