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Efficient Motion Sickness Assessment: Recreation of On-Road Driving on a Compact Test Track
Author(s) -
Huseyin Harmankaya,
Adrian Brietzke,
Rebecca Pham Xuan,
Barys Shyrokau,
Riender Happee,
Georgios Papaioannou
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
ieee transactions on intelligent transportation systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Magazines
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.591
H-Index - 153
eISSN - 1558-0016
pISSN - 1524-9050
DOI - 10.1109/tits.2025.3608238
Subject(s) - transportation , aerospace , communication, networking and broadcast technologies , computing and processing , robotics and control systems , signal processing and analysis
The ability to engage in other activities during the ride is considered by consumers as one of the key reasons for the adoption of automated vehicles. However, engagement in non-driving activities will provoke occupants’ motion sickness, deteriorating their overall comfort and thereby risking acceptance of automated driving. Therefore, it is critical to extend our understanding of motion sickness and unravel the modulating factors that affect it through experiments with participants. Currently, most experiments are conducted on public roads (realistic but not reproducible) or test tracks (feasible with prototype automated vehicles). This research study develops a method to design an optimal path and speed reference to accurately replicate on-road motion sickness exposure on a small test track. The method uses model predictive control to replicate the longitudinal and lateral accelerations collected from on-road drives on a test track of 70 m by 175 m. A within-subject experiment (47 participants) was conducted comparing the occupants’ motion sickness occurrence in test-track and on-road conditions, with the conditions being cross-randomized. The results illustrate that the subjective (reported) motion sickness is well reproduced with an insignificant reduction on the track. Meanwhile, there is an overall correspondence of individual sickness levels between on-road and test-track. This paves the path for the employment of our method for a simpler, safer and more replicable assessment of motion sickness.

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