Steering with the head: The visual strategy of a racing driver

Citation
Mf. Land et Bw. Tatler, Steering with the head: The visual strategy of a racing driver, CURR BIOL, 11(15), 2001, pp. 1215-1220
Citations number
7
Categorie Soggetti
Experimental Biology
Journal title
CURRENT BIOLOGY
ISSN journal
09609822 → ACNP
Volume
11
Issue
15
Year of publication
2001
Pages
1215 - 1220
Database
ISI
SICI code
0960-9822(20010807)11:15<1215:SWTHTV>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
We studied the eye movements of a racing driver during high-speed practice to see whether he took in visual information in a different way from a norm al driver on a winding road [1, 2]. We found that, when cornering, he spent most of the time looking close to, but not exactly at, the tangent points on the inside edges of the bends. Each bend was treated slightly differentl y, and there was a highly repeatable pattern to the way the track edge was viewed throughout each bend. We also found a very close relationship betwee n the driver's head direction and the rate of rotation of the car 1 s later . We interpret these observations as indicating that the driver's gaze is n ot driven directly by tangent point location, as it is in ordinary driving. Instead, we propose that his head direction is driven by the same informat ion that he uses to control steering and speed, namely his knowledge! of th e track and his racing line round it. If he directs his head at an angle pr oportional to his estimate of car rotation speed, this will automatically b ring his head roughly into line with the tangent points of the bends. From this standardized position, he can use the expected movements of the tangen t points in his field of view to verify, and if necessary modify, his racin g line during the following second.