scholarly journals Does Information on Automated Driving Functions and the Way of Presenting It before Activation Influence Users’ Behavior and Perception of the System?

Information ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Danner ◽  
Matthias Pfromm ◽  
Klaus Bengler

Information on automated driving functions when automation is not activated but is available have not been investigated thus far. As the possibility of conducting non-driving related activities (NDRAs) is one of the most important aspects when it comes to perceived usefulness of automated cars and many NDRAs are time-dependent, users should know the period for which automation is available, even when not activated. This article presents a study (N = 33) investigating the effects of displaying the availability duration before—versus after—activation of the automation on users’ activation behavior and on how the system is rated. Furthermore, the way of addressing users regarding the availability on a more personal level to establish “sympathy” with the system was examined with regard to acceptance, usability, and workload. Results show that displaying the availability duration before activating the automation reduces the frequency of activations when no NDRA is executable within the automated drive. Moreover, acceptance and usability were higher and workload was reduced as a result of this information being provided. No effects were found with regard to how the user was addressed.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vasileios Nittas ◽  
Margot Mütsch ◽  
Julia Braun ◽  
Milo Alan Puhan

BACKGROUND The availability and use of health apps continues to increase, revolutionizing the way mobile health interventions are delivered. Apps are increasingly used to prevent disease, improve well-being, and promote healthy behavior. On a similar rise is the incidence of skin cancers. Much of the underlying risk can be prevented through behavior change and adequate sun protection. Self-monitoring apps have the potential to facilitate prevention by measuring risk (eg, sun intensity) and encouraging protective behavior (eg, seeking shade). OBJECTIVE Our aim was to assess health care consumer preferences for sun protection with a self-monitoring app that tracks the duration and intensity of sun exposure and provides feedback on when and how to protect the skin. METHODS We conducted an unlabeled discrete choice experiment with 8 unique choice tasks, in which participants chose among 2 app alternatives, consisting of 5 preidentified 2-level attributes (self-monitoring method, privacy control, data sharing with health care provides, reminder customizability, and costs) that were the result of a multistep and multistakeholder qualitative approach. Participant preferences, and thus, the relative importance of attributes and their levels were estimated using conditional logit modeling. Analyses consisted of 200 usable surveys, yielding 3196 observations. RESULTS Our respondents strongly preferred automatic over manually operated self-monitoring (odds ratio [OR] 2.37, 95% CI 2.06-2.72) and no cost over a single payment of 3 Swiss francs (OR 1.72, 95% CI 1.49-1.99). They also preferred having over not having the option of sharing their data with a health care provider of their choice (OR 1.66, 95% CI 1.40-1.97), repeated over single user consents, whenever app data are shared with commercial thirds (OR 1.57, 95% CI 1.31-1.88), and customizable over noncustomizable reminders (OR 1.30, 95% CI 1.09-1.54). While most participants favored thorough privacy infrastructures, the attribute of privacy control was a relatively weak driver of app choice. The attribute of self-monitoring method significantly interacted with gender and perceived personal usefulness of health apps, suggesting that female gender and lower perceived usefulness are associated with relatively weaker preferences for automatic self-monitoring. CONCLUSIONS Based on the preferences of our respondents, we found that the utility of a self-monitoring sun protection app can be increased if the app is simple and adjustable; requires minimal effort, time, or expense; and has an interoperable design and thorough privacy infrastructure. Similar features might be desirable for preventive health apps in other areas, paving the way for future discrete choice experiments. Nonetheless, to fully understand these preference dynamics, further qualitative or mixed method research on mobile self-monitoring-based sun protection and broader preventive mobile self-monitoring is required. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT RR2-10.2196/16087


Entropy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (9) ◽  
pp. 1179
Author(s):  
Saulo V. Moreira ◽  
Breno Marques ◽  
Fernando L. Semião

The investigation of the phenomenon of dephasing assisted quantum transport, which happens when the presence of dephasing benefits the efficiency of this process, has been mainly focused on Markovian scenarios associated with constant and positive dephasing rates in their respective Lindblad master equations. What happens if we consider a more general framework, where time-dependent dephasing rates are allowed, thereby, permitting the possibility of non-Markovian scenarios? Does dephasing-assisted transport still manifest for non-Markovian dephasing? Here, we address these open questions in a setup of coupled two-level systems. Our results show that the manifestation of non-Markovian dephasing-assisted transport depends on the way in which the incoherent energy sources are locally coupled to the chain. This is illustrated with two different configurations, namely non-symmetric and symmetric. Specifically, we verify that non-Markovian dephasing-assisted transport manifested only in the non-symmetric configuration. This allows us to draw a parallel with the conditions in which time-independent Markovian dephasing-assisted transport manifests. Finally, we find similar results by considering a controllable and experimentally implementable system, which highlights the significance of our findings for quantum technologies.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 200910
Author(s):  
Flávio L. Pinheiro ◽  
Jorge M. Pacheco ◽  
Francisco C. Santos

The exploration of different behaviours is part of the adaptation repertoire of individuals to new environments. Here, we explore how the evolution of cooperative behaviour is affected by the interplay between exploration dynamics and social learning, in particular when individuals engage on prisoner’s dilemma along the edges of a social network. We show that when the population undergoes a transition from strong to weak exploration rates a decline in the overall levels of cooperation is observed. However, if the rate of decay is lower in highly connected individuals (Leaders) than for the less connected individuals (Followers) then the population is able to achieve higher levels of cooperation. Finally, we show that minor differences in selection intensities (the degree of determinism in social learning) and individual exploration rates, can translate into major differences in the observed collective dynamics.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2099 (1) ◽  
pp. 012008
Author(s):  
A P Karpov ◽  
V A Erzunov ◽  
E B Shchanikova ◽  
Yu G Bartenev

Abstract The paper considers the way of reducing the time consumed to solve SLAEs with iterative methods by reusing the data structures obtained in the solution of a previous SLAE, or selecting a preconditioner from the available set of preconditioners to minimize the time of solving the next SLAEs. Such adaptive preconditioning is used to solve time-dependent nonlinear problems. SLAEs generated at the Newton iteration n-1 of every computation step are solved using the SLAE structure of the first Newton iteration and the selection of a preconditioner from the given set allows reducing the time of solving SLAEs of a varying complexity at different time steps. The adaptive preconditioning idea and its application are demonstrated for a stream of SLAEs in some RFNC-VNIIEF’s codes.


2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-48
Author(s):  
Naomi Stead

Austerlitz was the German expatriate author W. G. Sebald’s last book before his untimely death in 2001. Greeted with great critical acclaim, the novel is a profound meditation on history, memory, and loss. Sebald’s larger attempt to represent and memorialise the lasting trauma of the Holocaust, in an oblique and understated rather than a literal way, led him to a new kind of literary expression described by Eric Homberger as ‘part hybrid novel, part memoir and part travelogue’. What is most interesting about Austerlitz, for the purposes of this article, is that it makes so much use of architecture. In this, it joins a tradition of literary works that treat architecture as a metaphor for human endeavour and artifice, social structures, and attempts to order and construct the world. But, there is more to the buildings in Austerlitz. The book offers insights into the larger meaning – often, but not always, melancholy – of architecture in culture and society, past and present. This is elucidated at a personal level, in the way that surroundings and spatial atmospheres can affect the emotional life of an individual, and also at a collective level, in the way that buildings bear witness to, and last beyond, the trials and duration of a single human life.


Author(s):  
J. Pierrus

This chapter comprises questions of a miscellaneous nature. They mostly have little in common except that all processes are time-dependent and occur within matter. The first few questions introduce some important preliminaries. For example, modifying Maxwell’s equations to include the effect of matter. The behaviour of the electromagnetic field at the boundary between two media having different properties is an important topic. The matching conditions (as they are known) are derived from both the integral and differential forms of Maxwell’s equations. Certain specific examples then follow, including some simple applications involving conductors, dielectrics and tenuous electronic plasmas. Along the way, the connection between Maxwell’s electrodynamics and the laws of geometrical optics is demonstrated explicitly.


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