 
     Victoria Banks and Neville Stanton [1] of Southampton University’s Transportation Research Group examine the real impact of creeping driver automation.     
     
Safety research suggests that 90% of accidents are thought to be a result of driver inattentiveness to unpredictable or incomplete information and the vision is that highly automated vehicles will lead to accident-free driving in the future. This means that 100% of the active driving task will need to be completed by a combination of advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) with the driver becoming a passive monitor of system operation. The European New Car Assessment Program (NCAP) continues to drive vehicle manufacturers to meet minimal safety requirements. It ensures stringent guidelines and testing protocols are rigorously enforced in order that drivers and new car buyers are given transparent safety information through the NCAP Star Rating scheme. 
     
These formal testing procedures focus on the technical aspects of current ADAS which go some way in automating elements of the driving task. Yet there is growing concern within the ergonomics and human factors community that vehicle automation may actually increase pressure on drivers to monitor both the environment and the behaviour of vehicle subsystems. If this is the case the implementation of such systems could contribute to safety concerns rather than overcome them. Failing to acknowledge the role of the driver in an automated vehicle system may lead to undesirable behavioural adaptation such as changes to driver performance, as a result of inadequately controlling for the changing role of the driver within the control-feedback loops. 
     
It is unlikely that drivers will willingly and ever truly become disengaged completely from the task of driving and like a pilot in the cockpit of a modern airliner, the driver of a semi-autonomous car will assume a new supervisory role. This role becomes more important as drivers will have to simultaneously remain aware of multiple vehicle systems’ status and respond accordingly in the event of malfunction or failure. This monitoring by the driver will remain an important aspect of the control system regardless of the driver’s ‘location’ within the driving control-feedback loops.
 
 Despite the disintegration or possible removal of links  between the driver and vehicle subsystems in a highly automated driving  system, the driver will continue to receive feedback from both the  vehicle and environment and be able to anticipate changes in the  environment using ‘feedforward’ information. 
     
However,  the ability of the driver to actually undertake this new supervisory  role is not yet understood but it becoming increasingly important as the  average motorist becomes less actively involved in, and more removed  from, traditional vehicle handling. 
     
This  means that behind the facade of the internationally recognised NCAP  star rating there remains a great number of uncertainties.
     
Various  studies report mixed reviews of how automation impacts upon the  performance of individual drivers. It is already known that  ‘performance’ is heavily influenced by the type of automation and the  level at which it is set[2] yet the appropriateness of using automation  in driving remains open to debate. A growing body of research  highlights the unintended consequences of vehicle automation, widely  referred to as ‘out-of-the-loop’ performance problems such as  complacency, trust and under- or over- cognitive load that could lead to  driver reliance on ADAS functioning[3]. The balance between system  performance and driver expectations surrounding system functionality may  not be fully aligned. However, nobody really knows how to effectively  overcome these shortcomings. 
     
It  is important to remember that for some drivers, ADAS can support their  driving practice whilst for others, it can encourage riskier behaviour.  Although automated technologies can undoubtedly improve road safety,  technology fitment could increase this risk of driver disengagement or  even alter the perception of ‘risk’ due to the additional security that  automation provides.
There would be huge legal and ethical ramifications of being involved in an accident whilst ‘using automation’, one that could abruptly end the vision of accident-free driving in a fully automated driving world.
In  order to maximise the safety of drivers and other road users,  designers  need to be aware of how different design approaches can  affect  subsequent responses to critical hazards, which calls for  extensive  research.
     
Ongoing research  funded by the  Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council being  conducted at  Southampton University’s Driving Simulator Laboratory is  adding to the  growing body of literature surrounding the implications of  human  factors in increased vehicle autonomy. Researchers are using a   combination of quantitative and qualitative research methods to   investigate how increasing the level of automation in the driving task   can lead to changes in pre-decisional behaviour and driver-vehicle   interaction. In other words how the behaviour underlying subsequent   behavioural response may or may not be altered by the introduction of   ADAS.
     
Already the research   is revealing some interesting findings with modelling work and   experimentation showing how different design philosophies (such as   warning based versus non-warning based Autonomous Emergency Brake   systems) can affect driver behaviour in different ways. 
 
Modelling techniques show how the addition of automation can change the interaction that occurs between the driver, the vehicle and the surroundings using non-automated representations as a baseline for comparison. Although these can provide useful insights into how the driving system may change as a result of ADAS implementation, user trials are required to establish how drivers manage the additional task complexity.
User trials   suggest that  automation can affect driver-vehicle interaction (it can   affect who –  driver or vehicle - does what) depending on the way in   which the  system is designed and implemented into the vehicle. This in   turn can  have a direct effect on response times and stopping distances   (in the  case of critical events) as driver thought processes begin to   change.   Issues of trust and complacency should not be overlooked   throughout  the design process as drivers expect a fully functioning   system that  works all of the time. 
     
In    highly automated vehicles, such as those with next generation Cruise    Control, the risk of ‘mode error’ or ‘automation surprise’ should  remain   a real concern for systems designers. Mode error occurs when  the human   driver fails to understand the current and future state or  behaviour  of  automated subsystems with a common mistake being that the  driver  thinks  the system is ‘on’ when it is actually ‘off’. 
 
Automation    surprise occurs when unanticipated system  behaviour challenges a    driver’s mental models and does something  instinctively counterintuitive    such as ABS systems releasing the  brakes to correct a skid. User   trials  suggest that automation  surprises are likely to be a phenomenon    that  can be experienced by  all drivers regardless of their experience   in  using the system but  more likely to cause greater stress to those   with  greater usage or  experience in using automation. Any errors,   delays or  other  shortcomings in these areas have the potential to   result in future   accidents - especially if the automation behaves   consistently for   prolonged periods enabling drivers to become   complacent. 
     
    
Implications
Although     it may be argued that the benefits of automation outweigh any    potential  financial costs, it is becoming clear that the design of the    system  plays a vital role in controlling or limiting the degree of    behavioural  adaptation. If one design approach proves to be superior to    any other,  standardised design protocols should be developed to   ensure  that all  vehicle manufacturers use the same basic model in an   effort  to balance  the effects of automation implementation as much as    possible.
     
A  ‘driver   sensitive support system’  can only be achieved if there is  better   integration and acknowledgement  of driver-vehicle-world  interactions.   More research is needed to  understand and identify other  system   weaknesses that go beyond  technological components within the  driving   system.
     
 1. V. A. Banks, N. A. Stanton, C. Harvey. Sub-Systems on the Road to Vehicle Automation: Hands and Feet Free but Not ‘Mind’ Free Driving. Safety Science 62 (2014).
2. R. Parasuraman. Designing automation for human use: empirical studies and quantitative models. Ergonomics 43, 7 (2000).
3. M. R. Endsley, E. O. Kiris. The out-of-the-loop performance problem and level of control in automation, Human Factors 37, (1995).    
 
 
     
         
         
        



