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  <title><![CDATA[PhD Defense by Brittany Holthausen]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p><strong>Name:</strong>&nbsp;Brittany Holthausen<br />
<strong>Dissertation Defense Meeting</strong><br />
<strong>Date:</strong>&nbsp;May 11, 2020<br />
<strong>Time:</strong>&nbsp;1:00 pm<br />
<strong>Location:</strong>&nbsp;<a href="https://bluejeans.com/680287802">https://bluejeans.com/680287802</a> &nbsp;meeting ID code: 680 287 802</p>

<p><br />
<strong>Advisor:</strong><br />
Bruce Walker, Ph.D. (Georgia Tech)<br />
&nbsp;<br />
<strong>Dissertation Committee Members:</strong><br />
Jamie Gorman, Ph.D. (Georgia Tech)<br />
Richard Catrambone, Ph.D. (Georgia Tech)<br />
Karen Feigh Ph.D. (Georgia Tech)<br />
David Keller, Ph.D. (Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren)<br />
&nbsp;<br />
<strong>Title:</strong>&nbsp;Development and Validation of the Situational Trust Scale for Automated Driving (STS-AD)</p>

<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>

<p>Trust in automation is currently operationalized with general measures that are either self-report or behavioral in nature. However, a recent review of the literature suggests that there should be a more specific approach to trust in automation as different types of trust are influenced by different factors&nbsp;(Hoff &amp; Bashir, 2015). This work is the development and validation of a measure of situational trust for the automated driving context: The Situational Trust Scale &ndash; Automated Driving (STS-AD).&nbsp;</p>

<p>The first validation study showed that situational trust is a separable construct from general trust in automation and that it can capture a range of responses as seen in the difference between scores after watching a near automation failure video and non-failure videos. The second study aimed to test the STS-AD in a mid-fidelity driving simulator. Participants drove two routes: low automation (automated lane keeping only) high automation (adaptive cruise control with automated lane keeping). The results of the second study provided further support for situational trust as a distinct construct, provided insight into the factorial structure of the scale, and pointed towards a distinction between advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) and automated driving systems (ADS).&nbsp;</p>

<p>The STS-AD will revolutionize the way that trust in automation is conceptualized and operationalized. This measure opens the door to a more nuanced approach to trust in automation measurement that will inform not only how drivers interact with automated systems; but, can impact how we understand human-automation interaction as a whole.</p>
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