Towards Safe and Comfortable Vehicle Control Transitions: A Systematic Review of Takeover Time, Time Budget, and Takeover Performance
Kexin Liang, Simeon C. Calvert, J.W.C. van Lint

TL;DR
This systematic review analyzes human-vehicle interactions during automated driving handovers, focusing on factors influencing takeover time, adaptive time budgets, and performance to enhance safety and user experience.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive taxonomy of takeover determinants, introduces the concept of takeover buffer, and proposes a conceptual model linking takeover time, budgets, and performance.
Findings
Synthesized causal factors affecting takeover time.
Reviewed fixed and adaptive time budget strategies.
Outlined a research agenda with six future directions.
Abstract
Conditionally automated driving systems require human drivers to disengage from non-driving-related activities and resume vehicle control within limited time budgets when encountering scenarios beyond system capabilities. Ensuring safe and comfortable transitions is critical for reducing driving risks and improving user experience. However, takeovers involve complex human-vehicle interactions, resulting in substantial variability in drivers' responses, especially in takeover time, defined as the duration needed to regain control. This variability presents challenges in setting sufficient time budgets that are neither too short (risking safety and comfort) nor too long (reducing driver alertness and transition efficiency). Although previous research has examined the role of time budgets in influencing takeover time and performance, few studies have systematically addressed how to…
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