Chao Wang
Both temperature and lighting play a role in what people experience in vehicles, Liu says, and those experiences have implications for a driver’s ability to safely and effectively manage a vehicle, make decisions, and respond quickly to different scenarios. Concentration, cognitive skills, memory, and reaction times are all impacted by temperature and thermal comfort. Light generally can affect alertness, sleep-wake cycles, and mood.
“When the temperatures are very hot or very cold, drivers can feel uncomfortable and annoyed, which impacts their driving,” Liu says. “In addition, studies have shown that during hot summers, drivers drive more aggressively.”
Thermal comfort and optimal lighting conditions also have implications for how vehicles of the future are designed, according to Liu. Commuters using self-driving cars might need temperatures and lighting that allow them to work while traveling. Electric vehicles may need to be designed with sufficient battery power to provide air conditioning for drivers traveling long distances in hot weather.
To test multiple temperature and lighting scenarios under controlled conditions, the researchers built a simulator that replicated the experience of driving a typical sedan. First constructed in Kaven Hall and later moved to Unity Hall, the simulator was equipped with screens and a projection system to display front, left, and right window views from a video game that depicts driving at night. A steering wheel vibrated to provide a realistic driving sensation, and an audio system generated road noise. Foot pedals simulated brake and accelerator pedals.
Chao Wang
Wang, who was a graduate student in Liu’s lab at the time, even hit the road for the study. He loaded his car with sensors and drove through Worcester to measure nighttime light so researchers could replicate realistic conditions in the simulator.
After screening applicants for a type of motion sickness that occurs in simulators, the researchers randomly assigned 72 participants to three groups that drove while the cabin’s temperature was set at 18, 23, or 28 degrees Celsius (approximately 64, 73, or 82 degrees Fahrenheit). All participants drove under four different ambient lighting conditions and, in a test of their mental performance, responded to numbers that flashed on a screen while they drove.
The simulator collected information on vehicle position, motion, acceleration, steering wheel movement, and gas pedal usage, and study participants completed questionnaires about their experiences. Liu says that while the simulator provided valuable data, real-world driving may involve additional factors.
The results offered some clear answers about light. Participants noticed changes in lighting, but the lighting changes did not affect driving performance. Liu says that finding contradicted some expectations about lighting’s role in comfort or alertness.
In contrast, temperatures mattered. Higher temperatures impaired driver accuracy, and participants reported more mental strain, more sweating, and more sleepiness. Overall, participants preferred the middle driving temperature of 23 degreesCelsius (73 degrees Fahrenheit).
Liu, whose research focuses on the design of healthy and sustainable indoor environments, says the next step in his lab’s research will be to analyze brain data collected from participants in the driving simulator.
“We’re interested in how brain signals and brain oxygen levels change under different temperatures and lighting conditions,” he says. “It’s possible that we may find subtle differences in brain activity that will go beyond what driving behavior can tell us.”