Relationship between Perceived Maneuverability and Involuntary Eye Movements under Systematically Varied Time Constants of Ride-on Machinery
Muhammad Akmal Bin Mohammed Zaffir, Daisuke Sakai, Yuki Sato, and Takahiro Wada

TL;DR
This study investigates how systematic changes in ride-on machinery dynamics affect perceived maneuverability, cognitive load, and involuntary eye movement accuracy, revealing that increased time constants reduce maneuverability and eye movement precision.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how dynamic properties of ride-on systems influence involuntary eye movements and perceived control, highlighting the importance of system design for operator stability.
Findings
Increased time constant decreased perceived maneuverability.
Higher time constant increased cognitive load.
Eye movement accuracy decreased with higher time constants.
Abstract
Studies suggest that involuntary eye movements exhibit greater stability during active motion compared to passive motion, and this effect may also apply to the operation of ride-on machinery. Moreover, a study suggested that experimentally manipulating the sense of agency (SoA) by introducing delays may influence the stability of involuntary eye movements. Although a preliminary investigation examined involuntary eye movements and perceived maneuverability under two distinct machine dynamics with preserved SoA, it remains unclear how systematic variations in motion dynamics influence these factors. Therefore, the purpose of the present research was to investigate whether systematic variations in the dynamic properties of a ride-on machine, where the perceived maneuverability is modulated, influence the accuracy of involuntary eye movements in human operators. Participants rode a…
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