2011
DOI: 10.1080/10447318.2011.555312
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Quantitative Physiological Assessment of Stress Via Altered Immune Functioning Following Interaction With Differing Automotive Interface Technologies

Abstract: Technology can enhance or diminish a user's psycho-physiological stress level; the ability to quantify these responses can help evaluate and refine design. The capability of drivers to accomplish basic tasks utilizing differing sensory modalities while maintaining lane discipline within a computer-simulated environment was assessed. Fifteen healthy subjects provided capillary blood samples before and after using three human-machine interface designs-touch-screen, voice control, and multimodal. Using a chemilum… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
(45 reference statements)
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“…Most of the work done so far in this area has addressed such challenges in isolation and at a high abstract level [28,12,30,8], has studied vehicle sensor data [37], driver feedback [17,20,36,24,38,14] (in a real or simulated environment) or performed physiological assessments [31,32]. The latter two strands of work entirely focusses on driver perception and experience; moreover borrowing from separate traditions of cognitive and physiological science.…”
Section: Motivationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most of the work done so far in this area has addressed such challenges in isolation and at a high abstract level [28,12,30,8], has studied vehicle sensor data [37], driver feedback [17,20,36,24,38,14] (in a real or simulated environment) or performed physiological assessments [31,32]. The latter two strands of work entirely focusses on driver perception and experience; moreover borrowing from separate traditions of cognitive and physiological science.…”
Section: Motivationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Measuring stress in wild animals has both academic and practical relevance; however, it is an under‐developed arena (see McLaren, Bonacic & Rowan, 2007; Shelton‐Rayner et al , 2010). Conservation interventions such as animal trapping, restraint and handling (Zhou et al , 1999; Laugero & Moberg, 2000; Bonacic & Macdonald, 2003; Bonacic, Macdonald & Villouta, 2003; McLaren et al , 2004), translocation and radio‐collaring (Tuyttens, Macdonald & Roddam, 2002) and species management programmes (Bateson & Bradshaw, 1997) all have an impact on their subjects; and it is essential that biologists recognize these stresses and their capacity to induce immuno‐suppression (see Cook et al , 2000; Moberg, 2000; Montes et al , 2003; Dawkins, 2004; Gelling et al , 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stress‐induced immune changes are therefore important in determining the consequences of a stressor, and observed immuno‐suppression in wild subjects can be used as a targeted measure of the costs of stress (see Monaghan et al , 2009). One such approach has been based on the stress‐induced production of ROS in leucocytes; the leucocyte coping capacity, or ‘LCC’ test (Montes et al , 2003), which monitors the multifaceted effects of stress using the body's leucocytes (primarily, but not exclusively, neutrophils) as bioindicators (McLaren et al , 2003; Gelling et al , 2010; Shelton‐Rayner et al , 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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