Measurement and mathematical model of a driver's intermittent compensatory steering control


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Authors
Johns, TA 
Cole, DJ 
Abstract

The compensatory (feedback) component of a human driver's steering control is examined. In particular the effect of the cognitive process is studied. Model predictive control theory is used to implement models of intermittency in cognitive processing. Experiments using a fixed-base driving simulator with periodic occlusion of the visual display are used to reveal the nature of the driver's steering behaviour. An intermittent serial-ballistic control strategy is found to match the measured behaviour better than intermittent zero-order hold or continuous control. The findings may enable some insight to driver-vehicle interaction and vehicle handling qualities.

Description
Keywords
control, robust control, driver behaviour, driving simulator, driver-vehicle systems, handling, objective evaluation, steering behaviour
Journal Title
Vehicle System Dynamics
Conference Name
Journal ISSN
0042-3114
1744-5159
Volume Title
53
Publisher
Informa UK Limited
Sponsorship
This work was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/P505445/1); the Qualcomm European Research Studentship Fund in Technology; and the Lotus F1 Team (RG61664).