Author:
Hunter Jacob G.,Ulwelling Elise,Konishi Matthew,Michelini Noah,Modali Akhil,Mendoza Anne,Snyder Jessie,Mehrotra Shashank,Zheng Zhaobo,Kumar Anil R.,Akash Kumar,Misu Teruhisa,Jain Neera,Reid Tahira
Abstract
While trust in different types of automated vehicles has been a major focus for researchers and vehicle manufacturers, few studies have explored how people trust automated vehicles that are not cars, nor how their trust may transfer across different mobilities enabled with automation. To address this objective, a dual mobility study was designed to measure how trust in an automated vehicle with a familiar form factor—a car—compares to, and influences, trust in a novel automated vehicle—termed sidewalk mobility. A mixed-method approach involving both surveys and a semi-structured interview was used to characterize trust in these automated mobilities. Results found that the type of mobility had little to no effect on the different dimensions of trust that were studied, suggesting that trust can grow and evolve across different mobilities when the user is unfamiliar with a novel automated driving-enabled (AD-enabled) mobility. These results have important implications for the design of novel mobilities.
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5 articles.
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