Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Europe Chapter

Annual Meeting 2024

April 17-19, 2024 | Lübeck, Germany


Dear colleagues and participants,

Welcome to the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Europe Chapter Annual Meeting 2024 in the beautiful Hanseatic city of Lübeck!

With a record number of submissions and participants for HFESE24, we are looking forward to the biggest HFES Europe Conference so far, with a diverse and exciting program covering the full breadth of Human Factors and Ergonomics research. We hope you will have inspiring days at the conference, while meeting old friends and making new contacts!

Further, as the local host, it is an honor and a pleasure to welcome you all here in Lübeck, the Nordic beauty and UNESCO World Heritage Site with its historical monuments, alleys and courtyards. The social program is aimed at giving you a taste of the city and its history and during the welcome reception and lab tour you will also have the chance to explore some of the human-technology interaction research that is taking place here.

We are very much looking forward to days of inspiring exchange and building lasting memories of HFESE24!
 

Organisation Committee 2024

Thomas FRANKE, University of Lübeck (GER) 
Stefan RÖTTGER, Naval Institute of Maritime Medicine (GER)
Antonella TOFFETTI, STELLANTIS – CRF, Torino (IT)
Karel BROOKHUIS, University of Groningen (NL)
Dick DE WAARD, University of Groningen (NL)

Foto: Olaf Malzahn
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18:00 - 20:00
18:00 - 20:00
Pre-Conference-Registration
IMIS Uni Lübeck
18:00 - 20:00
18:00 - 20:00
Welcome Reception and Lab Tour
IMIS Uni Lübeck
The IMIS is an interdisciplinary research institute at the University of Lübeck that has been conducting research in the field of human-technology interaction since 1997.
Please see the guide on top of this page.
08:15 - 09:15
08:15 - 09:15
Registration and Welcome Coffee
09:15 - 09:30
09:15 - 09:30
Opening
Prof. Thomas Franke
09:30 - 10:50
09:30 - 10:50
Session 1
Sustainability and Human Factors
Chair: Karel Brookhuis,University of Groningen, The Netherlands
Perceived sustainability and acceptance of carbon-reinforced concrete – Results of scenario-based vignette experiments
Christian BÖFFEL, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
Immersive urban planning: Infusing virtual reality into citizen participation for amplified engagement and sustainable planning
Marc SCHWARZKOPF, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany
Weathering the Storm: Human Factors Interventions in Railway System Resilience
Richard BYE, Network Rail, UK
Using Optimal Speed Signals in HMIs to Improve Ecodriving in Electric Vehicles - A Driving Simulator Experiment
Markus GÖDKER, University of Lübeck, Germany
10:50 - 11:20
10:50 - 11:20
Coffee Break
11:20 - 12:40
11:20 - 12:40
Session 2
Human-AI interaction 1
Chair: Stefan Röttger, Naval Institute of Maritime Medicine, Kiel, Germany
Proven and accepted: Do mathematical proofs for AI algorithms increase acceptance in non-expert users?
Alina TAUSCH, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany
Comparison of team emergent states between all-human teams and human-AI teams
Michèle RIETH, University of Bremen, Germany
The Role of Explainability in Dynamic Human-AI Interaction
Tobias RIEGER, TU Berlin, Germany
Exploring affective states and trust in a faulty chatbot
Tabea BERBERENA, University of Stuttgart, Germany
12:40 - 13:40
12:40 - 13:40
Lunch
13:40 - 15:00
13:40 - 15:00
Session 3
Session Transportation
Chair: Niels Brandenburger, DLR, Germany
A Field Study of Augmented Reality for Collaborative Ship Navigation
Floris VAN DEN OEVER, University of Bergen, Norway
The effect of multiple camera feeds on task performance, usability and attention allocation in Remote Train Operation
Nicole GOOSSENS, Dutch Railways, The Netherlands
Development and Evaluation of a Checklist for a Specific Non-Normal Situation in Electronic Interlockings
Justin ADAM, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany
Avoiding automation bias through critique? Experimental evaluation of a decision-support critiquing system for UAV task delegation
Marius DUDEK, Universität der Bundeswehr München, Germany
15:00 - 15:30
15:00 - 15:30
Coffee Break
15:30 - 16:10
15:30 - 16:10
Session 4
Aviation
Chair: Thomas Franke, University of Lübeck, Germany
Applying the Human System Exploration Modell to develop the AI-Based Flight Deck Decision Support System IPAS
Jakob WÜRFEL, DLR, Germany
Analysis of human and organizational factors of serious events involving aircraft from the French state aircraft fleet: preliminary results from a retrospective study from 2010 to 2020
Anthony VACHER, Armed Forces Biomedical Research Institute, France
16:10 - 16:15
16:10 - 16:15
Short Break
16:15 - 17:15
16:15 - 17:15
Keynote
Robotics Quo Vadis?
Sabine KÖSZEGI, TU Wien, Austria

Chair: Thomas Franke, University of Lübeck, Germany
17:30 - 18:30
17:30 - 18:30
Hansemuseum Tour
18:30 - 19:15
18:30 - 19:15
Europe Chapter HFES Business Meeting
Executive council, chapter members are welcome
09:00 - 10:30
09:00 - 10:30
Session 1
Maritime Human Factors
Chair: Dietrich Manzey, TU Berlin, Germany
The role of human factors in safety of inland vessels
Magnus LIEBHERR, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany
To sea, or not to sea, that is the question: Evaluating eye-tracking as didactical support and facilitator of tacit knowledge transfer in simulator-based maritime pilot training
Rikard EKLUND, Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden
The transformation of a safety culture: Implementation of Safety-II
Thomas KOESTER, FORCE Technology, Denmark
Evaluation of a four-section maritime watch schedule design and the question of rotation
Stefan RÖTTGER, Naval Institute of Maritime Medicine, Germany
10:30 - 11:10
10:30 - 11:10
Coffee Break
11:10 - 12:30
11:10 - 12:30
Session 2
Human-AI interaction 2
Chair: Francesco di Nocera, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy
Meta-Defined Virtual Humans and Moderated Multiparty Dialogues: A Novel GPTs Agent Architecture
Frank JOUBLIN, Honda Research Institute Europe GmbH, Germany
From Human-Automation and Human-Autonomy Teaming to Human-AI Teaming: Should, Want, Can, Do and be Accountable in Human Systems Integration
Frank FLEMISCH, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
Train your robot in AR: investigating user experience with a continuously learning robot
Anna BELARDINELLI, Honda Research Institute Europe, Germany
Learning, Troubleshooting, Teaching: When and why do healthcare professionals read instructions for use
Stephanie SCHWENKE, Use-Lab GmbH, Germany
12:30 - 12:45
12:30 - 12:45
Group Photo
12:45 - 13:30
12:45 - 13:30
Lunch
13:30 - 14:50
13:30 - 14:50
Session 3
Human Factors Methods
Chair: Susann Winkler, German Federal Bureau of Aircraft Accident Investigation, Germany
Hazard perception and attention of track safety supervisor as a function of working time
Shay ASARAF, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel
Spare visual capacity and driver inattention: Comparing simulator and naturalistic driving data
Abhishek SARKAR, University of Jyväskylä, Finland
Investigating the effect of salience and effort on the prediction of attentional distribution: A SEEV model analysis in the context of anaesthesiology
Robin ABENDSCHEIN, Julius-Maximilians Universität Würzburg, Germany
Comprehensibility and effectiveness of adapted beach safety flag designs
Fenne ROEFS, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam/ Mijksenaar BV, The Netherlands
14:50 - 15:20
14:50 - 15:20
Coffee Break
15:20 - 16:20
15:20 - 16:20
Session 4
Session Road Transport
Chair: Felix Siebert, Affil. Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
The Wave Driving Course
Antonio LUCAS-ALBA, University of Zaragoza, Spain
The use of smart glasses in the driving context under different distraction conditions
Nikita SHARMA, Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors at Dortmund University, Germany
Nudge based interventions to improve equity of road safety
Jesse RUMBALL SMITH, Wellington College New Zealand
Eyes on the screen, feet on the street: How pedestrians adapt their crossing and gaze behaviour when using a smartphone
Mirjam LANZER, Ulm University, Germany
16:40 - 17:15
16:40 - 17:15
Talking Poster Session
Chair: Dick de Waard, University of Groningen, the Netherlands
17:15 - 18:30
17:15 - 18:30
Poster session
20:00
20:00
Conference dinner
09:00 - 10:40
09:00 - 10:40
Session 1
Highly Automated Vehiclest
Chair: Antonella Toffetti, STELLANTIS - CRF, Italy
How do occupants perceive automated driving depending on seating position and non-driving related tasks?
Pia WALD, CARIAD SE, Germany
User Perspective on Highly Automated Shuttle Buses in Rural Areas
Nadine RAUH, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany
Enhancing Usability for Older Users in an Autonomous Car: Insights from the autoELF Stud
Kerstin KUHLMANN, TU Braunschweig, Germany
What could possibly go wrong? Using Human Factors and Ergonomics methods to assess the risks associated with advanced artificial intelligence
Paul SALMON, University of the Sunshine Coast , Australia
10:30 - 11:10
10:30 - 11:10
Coffee Break
11:10 - 12:30
11:10 - 12:30
Session 2
Session HMI and UX
Chair: Katja Karrer-Gauß, VDI/VDE-IT, Germany
Can a Virtual Break Room help to improve Relaxation and Performance for Air Traffic Service Officers?
Iosif CHAMOUNTA, DLR, Germany
Countering sedentary behaviour – how adaptive feedback can increase standing desk usage
Felix SIEBERT, Technical University of Denmark
User experience of Virtual Reality as a tool for knowledge work
Cecilia BERLIN, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
Evaluation of pilot spare capacity through control activity
Lauren DUGGAN, University of Liverpool, UK
12:30 - 12:45
12:30 - 12:45
Awards and Conference Closing
12:45 - 14:00
12:45 - 14:00
Lunch
14:15 - 16:00
14:15 - 16:00
City Tour
P01
P01
Better Training - Better Takeover? About the Impact of Knowledge on Takeover Reactions in Automated Driving
Tanja STOLL, Human Factors Psychology, ZHAW, Zurich, Switzerland
P02
P02
"AVATAR" - Anonymizing Personal Health Data by Creating Digital Avatars in Medicine and Care
Sven BOCK, German Aerospace Center - Institute of Data Science, Germany
P03
P03
The use of vitamin C in seasickness and visually induced motion sickness - a randomised placebo-controlled trial in sailors
Andreas KOCH, Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Germany
P04
P04
Minimal risk manoeuvre communication in highly automated shuttles via internal human-machine interfaces using media richness for user-centred interface design
Thorben BRANDT, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany
P05
P05
Railway remote driving. Reactions times and decision making of train operators
Beatrice SCHMIEDER, TU Chemnitz, Germany
P06
P06
Boosting Perception of Relevant Road Users Under Adverse Weather Conditions: Evaluation of a Human-Machine Interface for Remote Assistants of Highly Automated Vehicles
Andreas SCHRANK, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany
P07
P07
The effects of side lesion. Drivers with a left hemisphere stroke show the lowest Hazard Prediction accuracy
Cándida CASTRO, CIMCYC (Mind, Brain and Behaviour Research Centre), Spain
P08
P08
Towards Performance Prediction. Exploring Physiological Indicators of Process Control Operators’ Motivational State
Sebastian PÜTZ, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
P09
P09
Job requirements for future train drivers. A job analysis
Panja GOERKE, DLR, Germany
P10
P10
Guardians of the SAV – Security Measures for the Interior of Shared Automated Vehicles
Fabian SCHLICHTHERLE, University of Stuttgart, Germany
P11
P11
AI-assisted control in network operations
Samira HAMOUCHE, University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland
P12
P12
Evaluation of train remote control via tablet in a model railway layout
Anja NAUMANN, DLR, Germany
P13
P13
Poetry is not a random set of words: a study of fidgeting as a response to vigilance decrement
Giorgia TEMPESTINI, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy
P14
P14
Capturing the workplace cognition of adults with dyslexia via virtual reality testing and self-reports
James Smith-Spark, London South Bank University, United Kingdom
P15
P15
Perceived traffic safety and the use of different types of carriers to transport children by bicycle
Michael MINGE, Technische Hochschule Ostwestfalen-Lippe, Germany
P16
P16
Creating a Questionnaire Assessing Usability of Medical Devices used by Healthcare Professionals
Hannah WILMS, Universität Münster, Germany
P17
P17
AR-based Navigation to Virtual Stops in Demand Responsive Transportation: Where Do Users Need Information?
Fabian Hub, DLR, Germany
P18
P18
The Influence of AI Transparency on SMMs and UX in Human-AI Brainstorming
Joy GEUENICH, TU Chemnitz, Germany
P19
P19
Driver gaze behaviour before lane changes
Marijke VAN WEPEREN, TNO, The Netherlands
P20
P20
Insights into the UX-focused Design of the User Interface for a Collaborative Maritime Robot
Verena STAAB, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany
P21
P21
Communication between automated vehicles and pedestrians using Augmented Reality
Marc WILBRINK, DLR, Germany
P22
P22
Design of orthotic (helmet) for the treatment of infants with plagiocephaly
Hyeonkyeong CHOI, Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea
P23
P23
Understanding and Addressing Diverse Mobility Needs: A Framework for CCAM Solutions
Madlen RINGHAND, Dresden University of Technology, Germany
P24
P24
Wait, What!? Improving Situation Awareness in Autonomous Driving Through Cooperation
Jürgen PICHEN, Ulm University, Germany
P25
P25
Distance perception in VR depends on object size and influences pointing performance
Svetlana WÄHNERT, Technische Universität Dresden, Germany
P26
P26
Simulator-based connected mobility research: Opportunities, challenges and solutions
Michael HILDEBRANDT, Institute for Energy Technology, Halden / Norway
P27
P27
Optimising Collaborative Control: The Role of Haptic Feedback in Driver-Vehicle Interaction
Nikol FIGALOVÁ, Ulm University, Germany
P28
P28
How to flow in manufacturing work – Rethinking gamification in designing manufacturing workplaces
Leonie KLOEP, University of Lübeck, Germany
P29
P29
Interaction of Autonomous Vehicles and Vulnerable Road Users: Is an Equal Treatment Fair?
Josephine HALAMA, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany
P30
P30
Leveraging interactive preference learning to guide participatory design sessions
Fabian WALOCHA, DLR, Germany
P31
P31
Camera-monitor systems: The effect of horizontal camera displacement in on driver's gap acceptance
Elisabeth WÖGERBAUER, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany
P32
P32
“Why were you speeding?”: A Self-Confrontation Study on Awareness and Reasons for Speeding
Angèle PICCO, University of Groningen, the Netherlands
P33
P33
Responsible Experience Design for privacy on the web: results of an Ethical Co-Design Workshop
Stefan BRANDENBURGER, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany
P34
P34
Integrating validation into VR: An in-simulation validation approach to support participatory design processes in virtual reality
Duc LE, DLR, Germany
P35
P35
External Human-Machine Interfaces for Interactions of Pedestrians with Highly Automated Vehicles in more Complex Road Traffic Scenarios: Can AR-based Interfaces Help?
Michael OEHL, DLR, Germany
P36
P36
The role of system and situation complexity during the usage of new ADAS systems
Claudia BUCHNER, Ulm University/ BMW Group, Germany
P37
P37
Executing organizational control in the management of primary care medicines
Denham PHIPPS, The University of Manchester, UK
P38
P38
Crafting Tomorrow's Workplaces: Unleashing the Potential of Human-AI Teams in Safety-Critical Professions
Sophie BERRETTA, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany
P39
P39
Developer and User Perspectives in Human-Robot Collaboration: Insights from the EU Horizon FELICE Project
Melanie KARTHAUS, Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors, Dortmund, Germany
P40
P40
Concept for a future digital co-pilot from a teamwork perspective
Anne PAPENFUSS, DLR, Germany
P41
P41
Situational Control in Dynamic Environments reflected by Eye-movement Behaviour
Nils HEINRICH, Universität zu Lübeck, Germany
P42
P42
Cogito ergo sum
Thomas SIEVERS, University of Lübeck, Germany
P43
P43
Questioning Trust in AI Research? Exploring the Influence of Trust Assessment on Reliance in AI-assisted Decision-Making
Tim SCHRILLS, University of Lübeck, Germany
P44
P44
User Participation in the Design of Trustworthy Human-AI Collaboration in Air Traffic Control
Carmen Bruder, DLR, Germany
P45
P45
CoSy: An AI-Enhanced Learning Assistant for Communication Training of Future Health Providers at the University of Lübeck
Martina OBST, University of Lübeck, Germany
P46
P46
A proposal for the concept of Pro-adaptive Cognitive Assistive Technology
André KRAUSE, Rhine-Waal University of Applied Sciences, Germany
P47
P47
Interactions, Tasks, and Roles of AI-Systems in Anaesthesiology – A Team Perspective
Stephan HUBER, Julius-Maximilians University Würzburg, Germany
P48
P48
Using human motion prediction for path planning of mobile robots
Edgar SCHERSTJANOI, TU Dresden, Germany
P49
P49
Effects of a cognitive modelling approach on the transparency of robot behaviour
Alexander WERK, TU Berlin, Germany
P50
P50
Emotion Recognition and Situational Awareness: Key factors for successful Human-Robot Interactions
Sina SCHOLZ, Universität zu Lübeck, Germany
P51
P51
Chatbot-supported coaching in organizations: A field study
Silja KOTTE, University of Applied Sciences Aschaffenburg, Germany
P52
P52
Systematic Review on Executive Functions and the Adaptation to New Technologies
Eva GOESSWEIN, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany
P53
P53
What distracts healthcare professionals in their day-to-day work?
Stephanie SCHWENKE, Use-Lab GmbH, Germany
P54
P54
The role of Human Factors in Human-Robot Interaction: Experiences from healthcare, education, and workplace settings
Alexandra FERNANDES, Institute for Energy Technology, Norway
P55
P55
What is required for human-centred design in primary care medicines management?
Denham PHIPPS, The University of Manchester, UK
P56
P56
Giving up on privacy? Impact of resignation, social norms and privacy indications on app data disclosure
Jennifer KLÜTSCH, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
P57
P57
SmartUse – Developing and validating a short scale for assessing users’ perceived mobile app usability
Lana MOHR, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany
P58
P58
Exploring multimodal human-machine interfaces to warn distracted and older drivers of crossing pedestrians
Sandra TRÖSTERER, Virtual Vehicle Research GmbH, Austria
P59
P59
The Effects of Nuisance Alarms on Trust in App-Based Warning Systems
Mira VON DER LINDE, University of Münster, Germany
P60
P60
Comparison of a test track and a video study on drivers’ gap acceptance as a basis for intuitive automated vehicle driving functions
Ann-Christin HENSCH, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany
P61
P61
Evaluation of the effectiveness of advanced distraction warnings triggered by driver monitoring systems to mitigate visual distraction
Ina KONIAKOWSKY, Chemnitz University of Technology/BMW, Germany
P62
P62
Neuroergonomic workload analysis for mobile workplaces using EEG
Julian REISER, Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors, Germany
P63
P63
Attention and crash involvement – an in-depth analysis
Mette Møller, Technical University of Denmark
P64
P64
Robotic arm simulator for training machine operators and evaluating control capabilities: Design and experimental validation of closed-loop controlled aiming movements
Felix DREGER, Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors (IfADo), Germany
P65
P65
Multitasking while driving: The effects of cognitive load on decision making while driving
Moritz HELD, University of Oldenburg, Germany
P66
P66
A neural network to determine train operator’s compliance with driver advisory systems
Gina SCHNUECKER, DLR, Germany
P67
P67
Cybersecurity within Organizations: Proposal of a Cybersecurity Activity Analysis Model
Ayoub BOURHIM, Université Bretagne Sud, France
P68
P68
Auditory Detectability and Evaluation of Mobile Robots in Social Environments: Findings from a laboratory experiment and outlook to a follow-up field study
Marlene WESSELS, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, Germany
P69
P69
Will they, or won’t they? – Factors for Anticipating Pedestrian Crossing Decisions for Improved Traffic Safety and Passenger Comfort in Automated Driving
Adelina BERKEMEIER, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany
P70
P70
Measuring human sensitivity to foam stiffness in car seats
Pius SONNBERGER, Virtual Vehicle Research GmbH, Austria
P71
P71
Perceived degree of crowding and quality of public transport: The importance of including the third gender
Malte PETERSEN, DLR, Germany
P72
P72
Understanding Human Ability and Intention to improve Cooperative Automated Driving Takeovers following a Pattern Approach
Marcel USAI, Fraunhofer FKIE, Germany
P73
P73
Exploring How Pedestrians React to Robots in Public Spaces: An Eye Tracking Study in the Field
Zhe ZENG, Ulm University, Germany
P74
P74
Drone size matters: The impact of the size of unmanned aerial vehicles in overflight scenarios on risk assessment in the manufacturing context
Olga VOGEL, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany
P75
P75
“Is this how you like it?” Influence of traffic context on the perception of appropriate driving performance in automated vehicles
Marty FRIEDRICH, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany
P76
P76
Potayto, Potahto? Construct validation of job insecurity with digitalization context
Marvin WALCZOK, Industrial and organizational psychology, Institute of Psychology, Heidelberg University, Germany
P77
P77
Teamwork in future control room systems - perspectives from individuals in academia, industry, and operation
Signe SVENSSON, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
P78
P78
Musculoskeletal Disorders(MSDs) in Automobile Repair Centres in Korea
Chol-Hong Kim, Incheon National University, South Korea
P79
P79
Effects of sequential human redundancy on task effort and task outcome
Helene CYMEK, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany

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