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Journal Article

Citation

Park J, Ebert SM, Reed MP, Hallman JJ. Hum. Factors 2015; 58(2): 261-278.

Affiliation

Toyota Technical Center USA, Toyota Motor Engineering and Manufacturing North America, Inc., Saline, Michigan.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0018720815610249

PMID

26459426

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previously published statistical models of driving posture have been effective for vehicle design but have not taken into account the effects of age.

OBJECTIVE: The present study developed new statistical models for predicting driving posture.

METHODS: Driving postures of 90 U.S. drivers with a wide range of age and body size were measured in laboratory mockup in nine package conditions. Posture-prediction models for female and male drivers were separately developed by employing a stepwise regression technique using age, body dimensions, vehicle package conditions, and two-way interactions, among other variables.

RESULTS: Driving posture was significantly associated with age, and the effects of other variables depended on age. A set of posture-prediction models is presented for women and men. The results are compared with a previously developed model.

CONCLUSION: The present study is the first study of driver posture to include a large cohort of older drivers and the first to report a significant effect of age. APPLICATION: The posture-prediction models can be used to position computational human models or crash-test dummies for vehicle design and assessment.


Language: en

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