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Predictive validity of driving-simulator assessments following traumatic brain injury: a preliminary study
Authors:Lew Henry L  Poole John H  Lee Eun Ha  Jaffe David L  Huang Hsiu-Chen  Brodd Edward
Affiliation: a Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation Service, VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA 94304, USAb Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center, Palo Alto, CA, USAc Division of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USAd Rehabilitation Research and Development Center, VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA, USA
Abstract:
Objective: To evaluate whether driving simulator and road test evaluations can predict long-term driving performance, we conducted a prospective study on 11 patients with moderate to severe traumatic brain injury. Sixteen healthy subjects were also tested to provide normative values on the simulator at baseline.

Method: At their initial evaluation (time-1), subjects' driving skills were measured during a 30-minute simulator trial using an automated 12-measure Simulator Performance Index (SPI), while a trained observer also rated their performance using a Driving Performance Inventory (DPI). In addition, patients were evaluated on the road by a certified driving evaluator. Ten months later (time-2), family members observed patients driving for at least 3 hours over 4 weeks and rated their driving performance using the DPI.

Results: At time-1, patients were significantly impaired on automated SPI measures of driving skill, including: speed and steering control, accidents, and vigilance to a divided-attention task. These simulator indices significantly predicted the following aspects of observed driving performance at time-2: handling of automobile controls, regulation of vehicle speed and direction, higher-order judgment and self-control, as well as a trend-level association with car accidents. Automated measures of simulator skill (SPI) were more sensitive and accurate than observational measures of simulator skill (DPI) in predicting actual driving performance. To our surprise, the road test results at time-1 showed no significant relation to driving performance at time-2.

Conclusion: Simulator-based assessment of patients with brain injuries can provide ecologically valid measures that, in some cases, may be more sensitive than a traditional road test as predictors of long-term driving performance in the community.
Keywords:Closed head injuries  cognition  computer simulation  driving behavior  ecological validity  predictive value of tests  risk assessment  safety standards  virtual reality systems
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