Automotive seat comfort is a critical factor in enhancing driver satisfaction, especially in sports cars, where design must balance comfort features and performance-oriented features like lateral containment and anti-submarining. This study adopts an empirical-analytical approach for assessing and modelling perceived comfort in sports car seats using both objective and subjective data. A total of 64 participants (50 males, 14 females) evaluated two types of sports car seats—a road model (SEAT A) and a racing model (SEAT B)—during 15-min driving simulations using a dynamic simulator equipped with a full-body pressure mat (XSENSOR X3 PRO). Comfort was assessed through a postural comfort questionnaire using 10-point Likert scales. Statistical analysis revealed significant correlations between anthropometry, pressure distribution, and perceived comfort. In light of the correlation analysis, regression models were developed for four anthropometric percentile clusters (0–25th, 25–50th, 50–75th, 75–100th). Models were validated (accuracy > 75%) and one of them (named Model III) achieved accuracies of 95%, 96%, 90%, and 97% for its percentile clusters. The proposed models offer actionable insights for tailoring sports car seats to different user percentiles, enabling more personalized and effective seat designs that enhance both performance and comfort.

Comfort Prediction Model for Sports Car Seats

Cuomo, Marco;Naddeo, Alessandro
;
Califano, Rosaria
2025

Abstract

Automotive seat comfort is a critical factor in enhancing driver satisfaction, especially in sports cars, where design must balance comfort features and performance-oriented features like lateral containment and anti-submarining. This study adopts an empirical-analytical approach for assessing and modelling perceived comfort in sports car seats using both objective and subjective data. A total of 64 participants (50 males, 14 females) evaluated two types of sports car seats—a road model (SEAT A) and a racing model (SEAT B)—during 15-min driving simulations using a dynamic simulator equipped with a full-body pressure mat (XSENSOR X3 PRO). Comfort was assessed through a postural comfort questionnaire using 10-point Likert scales. Statistical analysis revealed significant correlations between anthropometry, pressure distribution, and perceived comfort. In light of the correlation analysis, regression models were developed for four anthropometric percentile clusters (0–25th, 25–50th, 50–75th, 75–100th). Models were validated (accuracy > 75%) and one of them (named Model III) achieved accuracies of 95%, 96%, 90%, and 97% for its percentile clusters. The proposed models offer actionable insights for tailoring sports car seats to different user percentiles, enabling more personalized and effective seat designs that enhance both performance and comfort.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11386/4937195
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