Publication | Open Access
Increase in brain activation due to sub-tasks during driving: fMRI study using new MR-compatible driving simulator
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Citations
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References
2017
Year
Unlike simple driving simulators (joysticks, computer mouses, or trackballs) used in previous research, the addition of a driving wheel and pedals (accelerator and brake) to the driving simulator used in this study closely represents real driving. Thus, the number of processed movements was increased, which led to an increased number of unnecessary movements that needed to be controlled. This in turn increased activation in the corresponding brain regions.
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