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121POSTER 48COGNITIVE FACTORS INFLUENCING DRIVERS' MENTAL MODELS OF ADAS SYSTEMSZIRAN ZHOU (UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND), YIXUAN ZHAI (UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND), ARRYN ROBBINS (UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND) This study examines how trust and perceived safety influence drivers' mental models of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS). Survey data from 260 participants revealed trust mediates perceived safety, with gender and age shaping trust and usability perceptions. Cognitive load significantly impacted secondary task engagement, highlighting the need for optimized system design. The findings recommend tailored training and adaptive interfaces to address demographic and cognitive variations, enhancing trust, safety, and effective ADAS adoption across diverse users.POSTER 49COMPARING FOOD SECURE AND INSECURE COLLEGE STUDENTS DURING THE PANDEMICTANZINA AHMED (KINGSBOROUGH COMMUNITY COLLEGE), JACOB SHANE (BROOKLYN COLLEGE), CAITLIN CHU (CARLETON COLLEGE), ARIELLE EDWARDS (BROOKLYN COLLEGE), JOSEPH VERDINO (KINGSBOROUGH COMMUNITY COLLEGE), DAVID CAICEDO (BOROUGH OF MANHATTAN COMMUNITY COLLEGE), ROSITSA ILIEVA (CUNY URBAN FOOD POLICY INSTITUTE), KAREN JIANG (BROOKLYN COLLEGE), DANIEL BRUSCHE (BROOKLYN COLLEGE), HO YAN WONG (COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY), ANITA YAN (BROOKLYN COLLEGE) We examined how students' food insecurity related to their demographics, academic experiences, and reflections on food during the COVID-19 pandemic by surveying 246 undergraduates during the first 9 months of the pandemic. Students reported on food insecurity, income, GPA, and wrote two narratives. Compared to high security students, low/very lowsecurity students were more likely to identify as Black and first-generation immigrants and reported needing greater financial, academic, and programmatic support during public health crises.POSTER 50EFFECTS OF MALINGERING AND CORPORATE DEFENDANTS ON JURY AWARDSERICA BAER (KEAN UNIVERSITY), RICHARD CONTI (KEAN UNIVERSITY), JOSEPH PRECKAJLO (FLORIDA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY), PALAK VAIDYA (KEAN UNIVERSITY) This study examined how malingering and the presence of a corporate defendant can impact civil damage awards. Participants read an automobile accident case where the plaintiff was honest, exaggerating, or malingering, and the at-fault driver was an Uber driver, UPS driver, or a civilian. All participants completed the Just World Belief Scale (JWBS) and the Revised Legal Attitudes Questionnaire (RLAQ). The defendant type and presence of malingering significantly impacted damage awards.POSTER 51EVALUATING THE EFFECTIVENESS OF A VIDEO INTERVENTION ON BREASTFEEDING KNOWLEDGE AND ATTITUDEJULIA DAVIS (MILLERSVILLE UNIVERSITY), JESSICA GRADY (MILLERSVILLE UNIVERSITY), KARENA RUSH (MILLERSVILLE UNIVERSITY) The study will utilize a pre-test, post-test two group design where one group of participants will take measures designed to assess both their attitude and knowledge of breastfeeding and then, they will view a short video material which encompasses early intervention of breastfeeding concepts and afterwards they'll retake the previous measures. The other group will view a control video. Data collection and analysis will be completed early next year.POSTER 52EXPERIENCE IS NOT A RELIABLE INDICATOR OF PERCEPTUAL EXPERTISEROBERT ALEXANDER (NEW YORK INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY), SOPHIA CASTRO (CUNY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE), ELANA SAFONOVA (NEW YORK INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY), TALIA LILIKAKIS (NEW YORK INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY), STEVIE ANN HILL (NEW YORK INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY), AYESHA MULLA (NEW YORK INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY), ASHWIN VENKATAKRISHNAN (SUNY DOWNSTATE HEALTH SCIENCES UNIVERSITY), STEPHEN WAITE (SUNY DOWNSTATE HEALTH SCIENCES UNIVERSITY), STEPHEN L MACKNIK (SUNY DOWNSTATE HEALTH SCIENCES UNIVERSITY), SUSANA MARTINEZ-CONDE (SUNY DOWNSTATE HEALTH SCIENCES UNIVERSITY) Professionals are often categorized by title and experience time rather than objective performance metrics, oversimplifying expertise. Precise measures of expertise would help training programs test whether trainees perform like experts and identify skills that need improvement. Our eye-tracking study quantifies the gaze dynamics radiologists use to detect abnormalities in medical images. Some residents outperformed experienced attendings; experience alone is an uncertain predictor of expertise. We 121Saturday, March 8