Received: 2021-07-29
Accepted: 2022-05-20
Published Online: 2022-09-15
© 2022 Cornelia Hollander et al., published by De Gruyter
Articles in the same Issue
- Special Issue: Advances in Experimental Psychology
- Fear and cultural background drive sexual prejudice in France – a sentiment analysis approach
- Advances in the application of a computational Theory of Visual Attention (TVA): Moving towards more naturalistic stimuli and game-like tasks
- Equal Quality for Online and Lab Data: A Direct Comparison from Two Dual-Task Paradigms
- When does “inhibition of return” occur in spatial cueing tasks? Temporally disentangling multiple cue-triggered effects using response history and conditional accuracy analyses
- A little doubt saves many mistakes: Early and late error detection in copy-typing
- Teachers’ ratings of social exclusion among students: The role of situational information and the ethnic origin of the excluded student based on the example of Syrian refugees
- Expanding dual-task research by a triple-task
- A Framework for Supporting Well-being using the Character Computing Ontology - Anxiety and Sleep Quality during COVID-19
- Looking at HMI Concepts for Highly Automated Vehicles: Permanent vs. Context-Adaptive Information Presentation
- Is There a Privacy Paradox in Digital Social Media Use? The Role of Privacy Concerns and Social Norms
- Research Articles
- Feeling Capable in an Ubuntu Way: Kenyan Comprehensions of Control Beliefs Compared with the German Perspective
- Interoceptive accuracy does not predict emotion perception in daily life
- Acute aerobic exercise and attentional focus influence the self-positivity bias in emotional evaluation. Evidence from an experimental study
- Response inhibition in the Negative Compatibility Effect in the absence of inhibitory stimulus features
- Mean girls, queen bees and iron maidens? Female leadership and accusations of workplace bullying
- Does Ego Depletion Elicit Stronger Cues of Deception?
- “In-emotional blindness”? Lower detection rates for unexpected stimuli in negative compared to positive emotions
Keywords for this article
driving simulator study;
trust in automation;
eye tracking;
autonomous driving;
in-vehicle human machine interfaces (HMIs)
Creative Commons
BY 4.0
Articles in the same Issue
- Special Issue: Advances in Experimental Psychology
- Fear and cultural background drive sexual prejudice in France – a sentiment analysis approach
- Advances in the application of a computational Theory of Visual Attention (TVA): Moving towards more naturalistic stimuli and game-like tasks
- Equal Quality for Online and Lab Data: A Direct Comparison from Two Dual-Task Paradigms
- When does “inhibition of return” occur in spatial cueing tasks? Temporally disentangling multiple cue-triggered effects using response history and conditional accuracy analyses
- A little doubt saves many mistakes: Early and late error detection in copy-typing
- Teachers’ ratings of social exclusion among students: The role of situational information and the ethnic origin of the excluded student based on the example of Syrian refugees
- Expanding dual-task research by a triple-task
- A Framework for Supporting Well-being using the Character Computing Ontology - Anxiety and Sleep Quality during COVID-19
- Looking at HMI Concepts for Highly Automated Vehicles: Permanent vs. Context-Adaptive Information Presentation
- Is There a Privacy Paradox in Digital Social Media Use? The Role of Privacy Concerns and Social Norms
- Research Articles
- Feeling Capable in an Ubuntu Way: Kenyan Comprehensions of Control Beliefs Compared with the German Perspective
- Interoceptive accuracy does not predict emotion perception in daily life
- Acute aerobic exercise and attentional focus influence the self-positivity bias in emotional evaluation. Evidence from an experimental study
- Response inhibition in the Negative Compatibility Effect in the absence of inhibitory stimulus features
- Mean girls, queen bees and iron maidens? Female leadership and accusations of workplace bullying
- Does Ego Depletion Elicit Stronger Cues of Deception?
- “In-emotional blindness”? Lower detection rates for unexpected stimuli in negative compared to positive emotions