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Theses and dissertations
Kaya, Nazli E. (2019). Visual attention failures towards vulnerable road users at intersections: Results from on-road studies (MASc Thesis). University of Toronto.
Ayas, S. (2019). Understanding and mitigating the effects of operating room distractions (MASc Thesis). University of Toronto.
Hopkins, S. A. (2019). Human Automation Coordination: Supporting driver takeover during predictable and unpredictable automation failures (MASc Thesis). University of Toronto.
Giang, W. C. (2018). Supporting Transfer Time Predictions in Medical Dispatch using Visualizations of Historical Data (PhD Dissertation). University of Toronto.
Risteska, M., (2018). Exploration of naturalistic driving data: Development of distracted driver behaviour models (MASc Thesis). University of Toronto.
Ponnambalam, C. T. (2018).Effects of searching for parking on driver behaviour, physiology, and visual attention allocation: An on-road study (MASc Thesis). University of Toronto.
Merrikhpour, M. (2017). Utilizing the Social Norms Theory to mitigate teen driver distraction (PhD Dissertation). University of Toronto.
Sokol, N. (2017). The effects of noise-robustness of in-car voice-controlled systems on user perceptions and driving behaviour (MASc Thesis). University of Toronto.
Xie, J. (2016). Gaming to safety: The design and evaluation of feedback gamification for mitigating driver distraction (MASc Thesis). University of Toronto.
Stahl, P. (2015). Defining, investigating, and supporting anticipatory driving: A systematic investigation of the competence to predict traffic (PhD Dissertation). University of Toronto.
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