CalassoR. (1994). The marriage of Cadmus and Harmony. New York: Vintage Books.
2.
CarmodyJ.HarderK.HancockP. A. (2000, May). Designing safer transportation environments. Paper presented at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Environmental Design Research Association. San Francisco, CA.
3.
GibsonJ. J.CrooksL. E. (1938). A theoretical field analysis of automobile drivingAmerican Journal of Psychology, 51, 453–471.
4.
HaddonW. (1970). On the escape of tigers: An ecologic noteTechnology Review, 72, 44–47.
5.
HancockP. A. (1997). Essays on the future of human-machine systems. Eden Prairie, MN: Banta.
6.
HancockP. A.HurtH. H.OuelletJ. V.Jr.ThomD. R. (1986). Failures of driver sustained attention in the etiology of motorcycle-automobile collision. In Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Human Factors Association of Canada (Vol. 19, pp. 53–56). Mississauga, ON: Human Factors Association of Canada.
7.
HancockP. A.ScallenS. F. (1999). The driving questionTransportation Human Factors, 1, 47–55.
8.
HancockP. A.SimmonsL.HashemiL.HowarthH.RanneyT. (1999). The effects of in-vehicle distraction upon driver response during a crucial driving maneuver. TransportationHuman Factors, 1, 295–309.
9.
HancockP. A.WarmJ. S. (1989). A dynamic model of stress and sustained attentionHuman Factors, 31, 519–537.
10.
HoffmanR. R.HayesP.FordK. M.HancockP. A. (2002). The triples rule. IEEE Intelligent Systems, May/June, 2–5.
11.
HurtH. H.OuelletJ. V.Jr.ThomD. R. (1981). Final report: Motorcycle accident cause factors and identification of countermeasures (DOT HS-805 862). Washington, DC: Department of Transportation, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
12.
JamesW. (1890). The principles of psychology. New York: Holt.
13.
KaufmanS. A., (1993). The origins of order: Self-organization and selection in evolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
14.
KoestlerA. (1973). The sleepwalkers. New York: Universal Library.
15.
National Safety Council (1999). Injury facts. Itasca, IL: Author.
16.
SchneiderW.ShiffrinR. (1977). Controlled and automatic human information processing: I. Detection, search, and attentionPsychological Review, 84, 1–66.