The HMI example presented in the panel was used to show that menu simplification is not just a visual preference. Eye-tracking and task-completion figures connected interface structure directly to driver workload and usability outcomes.

That makes the session useful beyond design commentary. It reframed HMI decisions as measurable task-flow and attention-management choices rather than as questions of style alone.
“Interface decisions assessed through workload and completion metrics”
Broader HMI methodology topics will continue through service and article content where more technical depth is possible.




