Reed M P, Manary M A, Flannagan C A, Schneider L W
University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute, Ann Arbor 48109-2150, USA.
Hum Factors. 2000 Winter;42(4):541-52. doi: 10.1518/001872000779698006.
The effects of vehicle package, seat, and anthropometric variables on posture were studied in a laboratory vehicle mockup. Participants (68 men and women) selected their preferred driving postures in 18 combinations of seat height, fore-aft steering wheel position, and seat cushion angle. Two seats differing in stiffness and seat back contour were used in testing. Driving postures were recorded using a sonic digitizer to measure the 3D locations of body landmarks. All test variables had significant independent effects on driving posture. Drivers were found to adapt to changes in the vehicle geometry primarily by changes in limb posture, whereas torso posture remained relatively constant. Stature accounts for most of the anthropometrically related variability in driving posture, and gender differences appear to be explained by body size variation. Large intersubject differences in torso posture, which are fairly stable across different seat and package conditions, are not closely related to standard anthropometric measures. The findings can be used to predict the effects of changes in vehicle and seat design on driving postures for populations with a wide range of anthropometric characteristics.
在实验室车辆模型中研究了车辆包裹、座椅和人体测量变量对姿势的影响。参与者(68名男性和女性)在座椅高度、方向盘前后位置和座垫角度的18种组合中选择他们偏好的驾驶姿势。测试中使用了两种刚度和座椅靠背轮廓不同的座椅。使用声波数字化仪记录驾驶姿势,以测量身体标志点的三维位置。所有测试变量对驾驶姿势都有显著的独立影响。发现驾驶员主要通过肢体姿势的变化来适应车辆几何形状的变化,而躯干姿势则保持相对恒定。身高占驾驶姿势中与人体测量相关的大部分变异性,性别差异似乎可以通过体型变化来解释。躯干姿势在不同座椅和包裹条件下相当稳定的个体间差异较大,与标准人体测量指标没有密切关系。这些发现可用于预测车辆和座椅设计变化对具有广泛人体测量特征人群驾驶姿势的影响。