| Literature DB >> 35360580 |
Abstract
Human performance in natural environments is deeply impressive, and still much beyond current AI. Experimental techniques, such as eye tracking, may be useful to understand the cognitive basis of this performance, and "the human advantage." Driving is domain where these techniques may deployed, in tasks ranging from rigorously controlled laboratory settings through high-fidelity simulations to naturalistic experiments in the wild. This research has revealed robust patterns that can be reliably identified and replicated in the field and reproduced in the lab. The purpose of this review is to cover the basics of what is known about these gaze behaviors, and some of their implications for understanding visually guided steering. The phenomena reviewed will be of interest to those working on any domain where visual guidance and control with similar task demands is involved (e.g., many sports). The paper is intended to be accessible to the non-specialist, without oversimplifying the complexity of real-world visual behavior. The literature reviewed will provide an information base useful for researchers working on oculomotor behaviors and physiology in the lab who wish to extend their research into more naturalistic locomotor tasks, or researchers in more applied fields (sports, transportation) who wish to bring aspects of the real-world ecology under experimental scrutiny. Part of a Research Topic on Gaze Strategies in Closed Self-paced tasks, this aspect of the driving task is discussed. It is in particular emphasized why it is important to carefully separate the visual strategies driving (quite closed and self-paced) from visual behaviors relevant to other forms of driver behavior (an open-ended menagerie of behaviors). There is always a balance to strike between ecological complexity and experimental control. One way to reconcile these demands is to look for natural, real-world tasks and behavior that are rich enough to be interesting yet sufficiently constrained and well-understood to be replicated in simulators and the lab. This ecological approach to driving as a model behavior and the way the connection between "lab" and "real world" can be spanned in this research is of interest to anyone keen to develop more ecologically representative designs for studying human gaze behavior.Entities:
Keywords: ecological psychology; guiding fixations; locomotor control; look-ahead fixations; pursuit eye movement; visual guidance
Year: 2022 PMID: 35360580 PMCID: PMC8964278 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.821440
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1An ecological approach to natural gaze behavior. There is more than one way of making sure experiments and models capture real-world phenomena (rather than accounting for laboratory behavior only). The only way, or the best way, “into the wild” is not necessarily to take laboratory experiments and “make them more ecological,” adding more “naturalistic” features (starting from the bottom of the right-most black box). Or one may begin with real-world observation, that is, measurement and analysis of natural behavior not just anecdotal observation (starting in the top of the left-most box), identify candidate behaviors to experiment on and to model. Other routes are possible as well.
From an experimental and modeling point of view, gaze strategies in driving are a particularly attractive “model behavior” for understanding visual guidance in ecologically representative tasks.
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1. Ecological validity. 1.1. Field experiments are feasible 1.2 The whole spectrum from field studies through high-fidelity simulators to restricted laboratory designs can be covered. 1.3 Participants adapted to “natural” task demands over a long period of time readily available. |
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2. Empirically demonstrable representativeness. |
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3. The whole spectrum of skill development can be covered (novice to elite level experts). |
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4. Simple 3D scene layouts. |
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5. Instrumentation. 5.1. Physical convenience. 5.2. Availability of high-grade equipment. 5.3. Established methods of data collection, analysis, and interpretation. |
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6. Low dimensional controls. |
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7. A hundred years of research on driving in psychology and engineering gives a solid base to work from. |
Figure 2Task structure of driving vs. driver behavior. While the driving task can be described in terms of steering and speed control and visual anticipation with gaze, it does not follow that the underlying brain processes compose in this way (e.g., separate steering and speed control “systems” or “modules,” or gaze strategies specific to steering and gaze strategies specific for speed control).
Seven recurring “laws” of gaze behavior in the wild (Lappi, 2016) are exemplified in driving.
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1.1. Fixation-saccade-fixation sequences, which are typical of almost all natural tasks (although what counts as a “fixation” in a natural task is itself a non-trivial question 1.2. Gaze is mostly concentrated in the Guiding Fixation region (far road), with a pattern of optokinetic nystagmus ( 1.3. Saccades are used to scan further (look-ahead fixations, forward polling; 1.4. Experienced drivers in traffic generally have broader scanning patterns than novice drivers ( |
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2.1. In curve driving, the guiding fixations occur in small visual region on road ahead (not more than 10° horizontally, 5° vertically; e.g., 2.2. Other targets must be identified very precisely in the periphery as they are fixated with precise saccades ( |
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3.1. Guiding fixations can be interpreted as fixation of different 3.2. Fixations at different depth distances and even in the scenery could maintain a “spatial image” of the scene layout (see note in L6, below). 3.3. Relevant targets, such as other road users, are also “monitored.” |
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4.1. Unless a (sub)task requires continuous monitoring/tracking, gaze disengages from the previous target and switches to the next just before (sub)task completion. That is, each target is fixated right at the moment they become relevant for guiding the next action ( |
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5.1. Gaze is highly labile. There are no fixation crosses in nature. We do not “stare” at a single target for a prolonged period of time. The visual world is sampled with 2–4 fixations per second, interspersed by saccadic suppression. 5.2. Blinks (0.1–0.3 s duration) also break up the visual input. Expert racing drivers that are highly reliant on high-quality input seem to tactically perform blinks at specific, less critical parts of the track ( 5.3. “Just-in-time fixations” (or guiding fixations, GF) are interleaved with look-ahead fixations (LAF) in driving, this happens, for example, in approaching a bend ( 5.4. In multitasking, fixations for one task are interleaved with fixations to targets relevant to a parallel task. Gaze time is shared between tasks. For example, glancing at the instruments can be interpreted as a form of intermittency ( |
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7.1. Control of the 7.2. Conversely, head and body movements are compensated by gaze-stabilizing eye and head rotations. |
For more detail and empirical examples, see Lappi et al. (2017).
Figure 3(A) Field of view of the driver. (B) Parsing “the road” into future path, and near and far road, based on time headways. The underlying image is from the supplementary movie in Lappi et al. (2017), from which the reader can get a feel for the dynamic behavior. (C). Bird’s eye view of the future path and time headways.
Figure 4Guiding fixations and the visual pivot strategy. This frame in this is taken about 2 s after the frame in Figure 3: the driver has now arrived at the far road (TH2s) region and begun to turn into the bend. Gaze is looking ahead, guiding steering, and anticipating the upcoming end of the bend. (A). Most of the time gaze is concentrated in a small region of the visual field—the guiding fixation (GF) region. The concept of guiding fixations can be operationally defined in terms of time headways, between about 1–2 s TH. (B). The GF region acts as a visual pivot, from which saccades are launched, and to which saccades return. Scenery and in-car fixations are eyes off the road fixations, the rest are eyes-on-the-road fixations. Gaze polling: i. saccade lands further ahead than the far road GF region and returns (look-ahead fixation, forward polling) ii. saccade made back to the near road and the back to GF region (return fixation, backwards polling). Tangent point fixation: saccade to the tangent point (a travel point on the inside lane edge). GF OKN: future path waypoint (or reference point) fixation. For these Guiding Fixations (the majority), the eye does not remain stable in its orbit: these guiding fixations are “tracking fixations.” The line of sight is locked onto locations in the 3D scene one is moving through. (Note: This is a schematic representation; what is here indicated by individual gaze points may be glances comprised of multiple fixations; and not all glances in the periphery always return to the pivot in a rigidly mechanical way).
Figure 5Schematic outline of the primary eyes-on-the road gaze strategies. When fixating a waypoint location the time headway reduces as one approaches it; the “fixation” is an oculomotor pursuit (when fixating any fixed reference point in the 3D scene one is moving relative to, the fixation is a pursuit). When fixating a travel point the time headway is constant. Also note that a “fixations” reported in natural tasks are often “glances” (i.e., the criterion of how large a saccade must be to “break fixation” can different in naturalistic and oculomotor research). TH, time headway to the point of fixation; OKN, optokinetic nystagmus; TP, tangent point; GF, guiding fixations; LAF, look-ahead fixations.