Bobbie D. Seppelt

Education

Ph.D. candidate, Industrial Engineering, University of Iowa, expected graduation 2008
M.S., Engineering Psychology, University of Illinois, 2003
B.S., Psychology, University of Illinois, 2001
B.S., Business Administration, University of Illinois, 2001


Research Interests

Interface design and driver support, automation reliance and supervisory control, design and testing of in-vehicle technologies, application of ecological frameworks to interface design, trust in automation.

Integrating Ecological Interface Design into the Engineering Design Process for Vehicles (Nissan):

The goal of this project was to apply Cognitive Work Analysis (CWA) and Ecological Interface Design (EID) to the driving domain to produce display guidelines for advanced driver support systems. Bobbie D. Seppelt examined the effect of displayed system limits of Adaptive Cruise Control (ACC) on human-system performance. She developed an EID display that supported safe braking response and headway maintenance and that resulted in appropriate reliance . Some of her activities included a literature review of visual attention, a cognitive task analysis of the control tasks associated with headway maintenance, situation assessment, and collision avoidance , experimental testing, and development of automation design requirements.

Cognitive Work Analysis Applied to Littoral Combat Domain (Aptima):

The goal of this project was to develop innovative mission plan understanding/assessment tools that will enable a mission manager of multiple heterogeneous unmanned vehicles to rapidly judge the value of plans developed by autonomous systems, choose between plan options, and understand how best to modify plans to achieve high-level tactical goals. Some of Bobbie D. Seppelt's activities on this project included creating an Abstraction Hierarchy (AH), conducting a control task analysis of the littoral combat domain, building display disturbance examples from a use case scenario, and developing a display prototype from the CWA analysis.

Auditory Versus Visual Delivery of In-Vehicle Task Information (GM):

The goal of this project was to characterize the effect of information modality and display location on attention management and interruption in driving, and to define the degree and kind of resources removed from the primary driving task when distracted. Bobbie D. Seppelt studied the role of in-vehicle task message redundancy, modality, and relevance on driving safety and performance. In a first experiment, she examined the interference between in-vehicle technology and driving performance, and in a second, she analyzed the modality and display layout effects of in-vehicle information.


Publications


Seppelt, B.D., & Lee, J.D. (2007). Making adaptive cruise control (ACC) limits visible. International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, 65(3), p. 192-205.
Seppelt, B.D., & Wickens, C.D. (In revision). In-Vehicle Tasks: Effects of Modality, Driving Relevance, and Redundancy. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied .
Seppelt, B.D., Lees, M.N., & Lee, J.D. (2005). Driver distraction and reliance: Adaptive cruise control in the context of sensor reliability and algorithm limits. Honda outstanding student paper award. In Proceedings of the Third International Driving Symposium on Human Factors in Driver Assessment, Training, and Vehicle Design, 255-261.

Seppelt, B.D., Lees, M.N., Lee, J.D., & Rizzo, M. (2007). Promoting repeatable research and collaboration - The benefits of a driving simulation wiki. Driving Simulation North America Conference 2007.
Click here to link to the Driving Wiki.

Seppelt, B.D., & Wickens, C.D. (2003). In-Vehicle Tasks: Effects of Modality, Driving Relevance, and Redundancy. ( Technical Report AHFD-03-16/GM-03-2). Savoy , IL: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Aviation Research Lab.
Lee, J.D., & Seppelt, B.D. (In press). Human Factors in Automation Design. Handbook of Automation, editor S.Y. Nof.
Lee, J.D., Hoffman, J.D., Stoner, H.A., Seppelt, B.D., & Brown, M.D. (2006). Application of ecological interface design to driver support systems. In Proceedings of IEA 2006: 16th World Congress on Ergonomics.
Linegang, M.P., Stoner, H.A., Patterson, M.J., Seppelt, B.D., Hoffman, J.D., Crittendon, Z.B., Lee, J.D. (2006). Human-automation collaboration in dynamic mission planning: A challenge requiring an ecological approach. In Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 50 th Annual Meeting. Santa Monica, CA: Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, p. 2482-2486.
Wickens, C., Dixon, S., & Seppelt, B. (2005). Auditory preemption versus multiple resources: Who wins in interruption management? In Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 49 th Annual Meeting. Santa Monica, CA: Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, 463-467.
Wickens, C., Dixon, S., & Seppelt, B. (2002). In-vehicle displays and control task interference: The effects of display location and modality. (Technical Report ARL-02-7/NASA-02-5/GM-02-1). Savoy, IL: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Aviation Research Lab.
Wickens, C.D., & Seppelt, B.D. (2002). Interference with driving or in-vehicle task information: The effects of auditory versus visual delivery. (Technical Report AHFD-02-18/GM-02-3). Savoy, IL: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Aviation Research Lab.



Honors and Awards


Dwight D. Eisenhower Graduate Fellowship Recipient Spring 2005, Spring 2006
University of Iowa Graduate Incentive Fellowship Fall 2005
International Driving Symposium on Human Factors in Driver Assessment, Training, and Vehicle Design Honda Outstanding Student Paper June 2005
Graduate Student Senate Travel Fund Award July 2005
Alpha Pi Mu, National Industrial Engineering Honor Society Fall 2004 - present
University of Illinois Dean's List Spring 2000, Fall 2000, Spring 2001
Insight Illinois Leadership Conference - Nominated Participant Fall 2001
Chatham Chamber of Commerce 1997-1998 Scholarship Award Fall 1997
Nelsen 1997-2001 Scholarship Award Fall 1997
   


Presentations


Simulator Users Group Forum: Introduction to Driving Wiki. Driving Assessment Conference 2007 July 2007
Making Adaptive Cruise Control (ACC) Limits Visible: Use of a continuous informaiton display to help operators manage imperfect automation.FIRE, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA September 2006
Driver Reliance and Intervention: Adaptive Cruise Control in the Context of Sensor Reliability and Algorithm Limits.Transportation Research Board, Washington, D.C. January 2006
Driver Distraction and Reliance: Adaptive Cruise Control in the Context of Sensor Reliability and Algorithm Limits.Driving Assesment Conference, Rockport, ME June 2005
Iowa Academy of Science 117th Annual Meeting, Cornell College, Mount Vernon, IA April 2005


Memberships and Activities


Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making Technical Group 51st Annual Meeting Reviewer March 2007
Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Surface Transportation Technical Group 51st Annual Meeting Reviewer March 2007
Human Factors Journal Reviewer May 2006
International Journal Vehicle Design Reviewer March 2006
Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Surface Transportation Technical Group 50th Annual Meeting Reviewer March 2006
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies Reviewer October 2005
Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Cognitive Engineering Decision Making Technical Group Best Student Paper Award Selection Committee Member August 2005
Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 49th Annual Meeting Reviewer January 2005
President of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Student Chapter of the University of Illinois August 2002 - August 2003
Human Factors and Ergonomics Society August 2000 - present
Principles of Marketing Student Advisory Committee Member August 2000 - December 2000
Volunteer Illini Projects, Inc. August 1999 - May 2001
Women in Math, Science, and Engineering August 1998 - December 1998
Marching Illini Piccolo Squad Leader August - December 1997, 1998, 1999
Symphonic Band IA, Symphonic Band II August 1997 - May 1998
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