Study on the Driver/Steering Wheel Interaction in Emergency Situations

Advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) are becoming increasingly prevalent. The tuning of these systems would benefit from a deep knowledge of human behaviour, especially during emergency manoeuvres; however, this does not appear to commonly be the case. We introduced an instrumented steering whe...

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Main Authors: Francesco Comolli, Massimiliano Gobbi, Gianpiero Mastinu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-10-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/20/7055
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spelling doaj-86a1f7ed47654071a394f7e2a3b612992020-11-25T03:10:37ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172020-10-01107055705510.3390/app10207055Study on the Driver/Steering Wheel Interaction in Emergency SituationsFrancesco Comolli0Massimiliano Gobbi1Gianpiero Mastinu2SMARTMechanical Company s.r.l., Via Tonale 9, 24061 Milan, ItalyDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Politecnico di Milano, Via La Masa 1, 20156 Milano, ItalyDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Politecnico di Milano, Via La Masa 1, 20156 Milano, ItalyAdvanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) are becoming increasingly prevalent. The tuning of these systems would benefit from a deep knowledge of human behaviour, especially during emergency manoeuvres; however, this does not appear to commonly be the case. We introduced an instrumented steering wheel (ISW) to measure three components of force and three components of the moment applied by each hand, separately. Using the ISW, we studied the kick plate manoeuvre. The kick plate manoeuvre is an emergency manoeuvre to recover a lateral disturbance inducing a spin. The drivers performed the manoeuvre either keeping two hands on the steering wheel or one hand only. In both cases, a few instants after the lateral disturbance induced by the kick plate occurred, a torque peak was applied at the ISW. Such a torque appeared to be unintentional. The voluntary torque on the ISW occurred after the unintentional torque. The emergency manoeuvre performed with only one hand was quicker, since, if two hands were used, an initial fighting of the two hands against each other was present. Therefore, we propose to model the neuro-muscular activity in driver models to consider the involuntary muscular phenomena, which has a relevant effect on the vehicle dynamic response.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/20/7055ADASdriver modelload cellsteering wheel
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francesco Comolli
Massimiliano Gobbi
Gianpiero Mastinu
spellingShingle Francesco Comolli
Massimiliano Gobbi
Gianpiero Mastinu
Study on the Driver/Steering Wheel Interaction in Emergency Situations
Applied Sciences
ADAS
driver model
load cell
steering wheel
author_facet Francesco Comolli
Massimiliano Gobbi
Gianpiero Mastinu
author_sort Francesco Comolli
title Study on the Driver/Steering Wheel Interaction in Emergency Situations
title_short Study on the Driver/Steering Wheel Interaction in Emergency Situations
title_full Study on the Driver/Steering Wheel Interaction in Emergency Situations
title_fullStr Study on the Driver/Steering Wheel Interaction in Emergency Situations
title_full_unstemmed Study on the Driver/Steering Wheel Interaction in Emergency Situations
title_sort study on the driver/steering wheel interaction in emergency situations
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) are becoming increasingly prevalent. The tuning of these systems would benefit from a deep knowledge of human behaviour, especially during emergency manoeuvres; however, this does not appear to commonly be the case. We introduced an instrumented steering wheel (ISW) to measure three components of force and three components of the moment applied by each hand, separately. Using the ISW, we studied the kick plate manoeuvre. The kick plate manoeuvre is an emergency manoeuvre to recover a lateral disturbance inducing a spin. The drivers performed the manoeuvre either keeping two hands on the steering wheel or one hand only. In both cases, a few instants after the lateral disturbance induced by the kick plate occurred, a torque peak was applied at the ISW. Such a torque appeared to be unintentional. The voluntary torque on the ISW occurred after the unintentional torque. The emergency manoeuvre performed with only one hand was quicker, since, if two hands were used, an initial fighting of the two hands against each other was present. Therefore, we propose to model the neuro-muscular activity in driver models to consider the involuntary muscular phenomena, which has a relevant effect on the vehicle dynamic response.
topic ADAS
driver model
load cell
steering wheel
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/20/7055
work_keys_str_mv AT francescocomolli studyonthedriversteeringwheelinteractioninemergencysituations
AT massimilianogobbi studyonthedriversteeringwheelinteractioninemergencysituations
AT gianpieromastinu studyonthedriversteeringwheelinteractioninemergencysituations
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