Investigating Driver Headroom Perception: Methods and Models
1999-01-0893
03/01/1999
- Content
- Recent changes in impact protection requirements have led to increased padding on vehicle interior surfaces. In the areas near the driver's head, thicker padding can reduce the available headspace and may degrade the driver's perception of headroom. A laboratory study of driver headroom perception was conducted to investigate the effects of physical headroom on the subjective evaluation of headroom. Ninety-nine men and women rated a range of headroom conditions in a reconfigurable vehicle mockup. Unexpectedly, driver stature was not closely related to the perception of headroom. Short-statured drivers were as likely as tall drivers to rate a low roof condition as unacceptable. Statistical models were developed from the data to predict the effects of changes in headroom on the percentage of drivers rating the head-room at a specified criterion level.
- Pages
- 12
- Citation
- Reed, M., and Schneider, L., "Investigating Driver Headroom Perception: Methods and Models," SAE Technical Paper 1999-01-0893, 1999, https://doi.org/10.4271/1999-01-0893.