Alois Ferscha, Andreas Riener,
"Pervasive Adaptation in Car Crowds"
, in Springer Berlin, Heidelberg: First International Workshop on User-Centric Pervasive Adaptation (UCPA) at MOBILWARE 2009, Berlin, Germany, Serie Lecture Notes in ICST (LNICST), 4-2009
Original Titel:
Pervasive Adaptation in Car Crowds
Sprache des Titels:
Englisch
Original Buchtitel:
First International Workshop on User-Centric Pervasive Adaptation (UCPA) at MOBILWARE 2009, Berlin, Germany
Original Kurzfassung:
Advances in the miniaturization and embedding of electronics for microcomputing, communication and sensor/actuator systems, have fertilized the pervasion of technology into literally everything. Pervasive computing technology is particularly flourishing in the automotive domain, exceling the "smart car", embodying intelligent control mechanics, intelligent driver assistance, safety and comfort systems, navigation, tolling, fleet management and car-to-car interaction systems, as one of the outstanding success stories of pervasive computing. This paper raises the issue of the socio-technical phenomena emerging from the reciprocal interrelationship between drivers and smart cars, particularly in car crowds. A driver-vehicle co-model (DVC-model) is proposed, expressing the complex interactions between the human driver and the in-car and on-car technologies. Both explicit (steering, shifting, overtaking), as well as implicit (body posture, respiration) interactions are considered, and related to the drivers vital state (attentive, fatigue, distracted, aggressive). DVC-models are considered as building blocks in large scale simulation experiments, aiming to analyze and understand adaptation phenomena rooted in the feedback loops among individual driver behavior and car crowds.
Sprache der Kurzfassung:
Englisch
Serie:
Lecture Notes in ICST (LNICST)
Erscheinungsmonat:
4
Erscheinungsjahr:
2009
Anzahl der Seiten:
6
Notiz zur Publikation:
This work is supported under the FP7 ICT Future Enabling Technologies programme of the European Commission under grant agreement No 231288 (SOCIONICAL) and grant agreement No 225938 (OPPORTUNITY).