Car Phone Usability: A Human Factors Laboratory Test

Abstract
This paper describes an experiment that examined the effect of car phone design on simulated driving and dialing performance. The results were used to help develop an easy to use car phone interface and to provide task times as input for a human performance model. Twelve drivers (six under 35 years, six over 60 years) participated in a laboratory experiment in which they operated a simple driving simulator and used a car phone. The phone was either manually dialed or voice-operated and the associated display was either mounted on the instrument panel (IP) or a simulated head-up display (HUD). The phone numbers dialed were either local (7 digits) or long distance (11 digits), and could be familiar (memorized before the experiment) or unfamiliar to the subject. Four tasks were performed after dialing a phone number; two of the tasks were fairly ordinary (listening, talking) and two required some mental processing (loose ends, listing). In terms of driving performance, dialing while driving resulted in greater lane deviation (16.8 cm) than performing a task while driving (13.2 cm). In addition, the voice-operated phone resulted in better driving performance (14.5 cm) than the manual phone (15.5 cm) using either the IP display or HUD. In terms of dialing performance, older drivers dialed 11-digit numbers faster using the voice phone (12.8 seconds) than the manual phone (19.6 seconds). Dialing performance was also affected by the familiarity of numbers. Dialing unfamiliar numbers using the voice phone was faster (9.7 seconds) than using the manual phone (13.0 seconds) and 7-digit unfamiliar numbers were dialed faster (8.2 seconds) than 11-digit unfamiliar numbers (14.5 seconds). Thus, the voice-operated design appears to be an effective way of improving the safety and performance of car phone use, but the location of the display is not important.

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