Backing collisions: a study of drivers' eye and backing behaviour using combined rear-view camera and sensor systems.

Author(s)
Hurwitz, D.S. Pradham, A. Fisher, D.L. Knodler, M.A. Muttart, J.W. Menon, R. & Meissner, U.
Year
Abstract

Backing crash injures can be severe; approximately 200 of the 2,500 reported injuries of this type per year to children under the age of 15 years result in death. Technology for assisting drivers when backing has limited success in preventing backing crashes. Two questions are addressed: Why is the reduction in backing crashes moderate when rear-view cameras are deployed? Could rear-view cameras augment sensor systems? 46 drivers (36 experimental, 10 control) completed 16 parking trials over 2 days (eight trials per day). Experimental articipants were provided with a sensor camera system, controls were not. Three crash scenarios were introduced. Only 20% of drivers looked at the rear-view camera before backing, and 88% of those did not crash. Of those who did not look at the rear-view camera before backing, 46% looked after the sensor warned the driver. This study indicates that drivers not only attend to an audible warning, but will look at a rear-view camera if available. Evidence suggests that when used appropriately, rear-view cameras can mitigate the occurrence of backing crashes, particularly when paired with an appropriate sensor system.

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Publication

Library number
I E146738 /83 / ITRD E146738
Source

Injury Prevention. 2010. 16 Pp79-84

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.