Carryover effects of highly automated convoy driving on subsequent manual driving performance.

Author(s)
Skottke, E.-M. Debus, G. Wang, L. & Huestegge, L.
Year
Abstract

In the present study, the authors tested to what extent highly automated convoy driving involving small spacing ('platooning') may affect time headway (THW) and standard deviation of lateral position (SDLP) during subsequent manual driving. Although many previous studies have reported beneficial effects of automated driving, some research has also highlighted potential drawbacks, such as increased speed and reduced THW during the activation of semiautomated driving systems. Here, they rather focused on the question of whether switching from automated to manual driving may produce unwanted carryover effects on safety-relevant driving performance. They utilized a pre–post simulator design to measure THW and SDLP after highly automated driving and compared the data with those for a control group (manual driving throughout). Their data revealed that THW was reduced and SDLP increased after leaving the automation mode. A closer inspection of the data suggested that specifically the effect on THW is likely due to sensory and/or cognitive adaptation processes. The authors concluded that behavioral adaptation effects need to be taken into account in future implementations of automated convoy systems. Potential application areas of this research comprise automated freight traffic (truck convoys) and the design of driver assistance systems in general. Potential countermeasures against following at short distance as behavioral adaptation should be considered. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
20190318 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Human Factors, Vol. 56 (2014), No. 7 (November), p. 1272-1283, ref.

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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.