3 research outputs found
Integración espacial de contenidos en entornos de realidad extendida
La realidad extendida es un conjunto de tecnologías inmersivas de la Cuarta Revolución Industrial que incluyen la realidad virtual, la realidad mixta y la realidad aumentada, y que son usadas en entornos inmersivos de aprendizaje. Sin embargo, para garantizar la utilidad de estas tecnologías se debe conocer el impacto de los principios multimedia que garantizan la integración espacial de la información, especialmente en entornos virtuales 3D, dado que estos son principios que buscan que el aprendiz use adecuadamente sus recursos cognitivos. Con el propósito de identificar la forma en que los mismos son usados y cómo influyen en la integración espacial de contenido en entornos de realidad extendida, se realizó una revisión sistemática de información. Los resultados muestran la influencia de tres características asociadas a las diferencias entre usuarios, permitiendo establecer un conjunto de técnicas que fomentan la integración espacial y proponer una taxonomía. Finalmente, se identificaron atributos de configuración del entorno virtual 3D y su influencia en la carga cognitiva de los aprendices. Estos resultados pueden orientar la aplicación de los principios de la teoría de la carga cognitiva en el diseño de entornos de realidad extendida para el aprendizaje y entrenamiento
The Adverse Effects of Paradigm and Pragmatism on Road Safety With Case Studies in Traffic Conflicts Technique and Cyclist Safety at Roundabouts
This thesis takes a multi-disciplinary approach to the hypothesis that “Engineering paradigm
and pragmatism are having an adverse influence on road safety.”
This proposition has been examined through a wide-ranging qualitative literature review, a
systematic quantitative literature review and a survey of Australian road authorities. These
provide evidence and reasons for adverse effects, drawing from both social science and
engineering perspectives.
The hypothesis was then tested using two known problems in road safety and a proof by
contradiction methodology. If rejecting accepted paradigm (case study 1) and pragmatic
practice (case study 2) lead to significant new knowledge being found, then current paradigm
and pragmatism are forming a barrier to optimal road safety research.
The paradigmatic case study considers Traffic Conflict Techniques (TCT), which theorises
that crash risk assessment can be determined based on observations of normal traffic events.
While TCT is used for problem diagnosis, numerous conceptual and practical difficulties
prevent a Holy Grail for safety practitioners being realized: TCT cannot predict crash risk
independently of a crash record. The case study considers this problem by rejecting the TCT
paradigm and developing a new theoretical framework based on Extreme Value mathematical
theory – the only proven basis for predicting rare events from observations of more common
events. The method developed by this theoretical case study, labelled Traffic Events Theory
(TET), overcomes all known problems associated with TCT. In particular, TET is
mathematically complete and should therefore enable risk assessment to be undertaken
without recourse to a crash record.
The pragmatic case study involves cyclist safety at roundabouts, and whether radial
roundabouts are safer than tangential roundabouts. This has been theorised but cannot be
shown using the pragmatic approach of associating crash data with geometric design features
due to the inherent complexity of roundabouts. The pragmatic case study rejects the
pragmatic approach in favour of an observational method applied to a tangential roundabout
converted to a radial design. This has identified geometrically-related implications for motion
detection in peripheral vision. In particular, the case study identified that tangential geometry
created conditions under which an approaching driver could not physically detect a cyclist,
exacerbated negative associations between cyclist tracking and safety, and made more likely
situations where a circulating car will briefly hide a cyclist from an approaching driver. These are all effects that have not been identified using the type of statistical safety studies
that traffic engineers use for pragmatic reasons.
The case study results represent valuable contributions to road safety knowledge. They also
confirm, under a proof by contradiction approach, that “Engineering paradigm and
pragmatism are having an adverse influence on road safety.” That is, adverse effects on road
safety are systemically-based with anecdotal case studies presented by other researchers not
merely troubling incidents occurring in isolation.
But if this hypothesis seems critical of traffic engineering and the road safety field, it also
offers practitioners the opportunity to reinvigorate their profession into the dynamic,
politically-aware and socially-engaged practice that characterised the golden age of
engineering.Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Social Sciences, 202