Driver behaviour in unexpected critical events and in repeated exposures : a comparison.

Author(s)
Benderius, O. Markkula, G. Wolff, K. & Wahde, M.
Year
Abstract

This paper aims to determine how truck driver steering behaviour seen in repeated exposures to acritical event correlates to the behaviour resulting from an unexpected exposure to the same event. Test subjects were exposed to an unexpected critical event in a high-fidelity driving simulator. Next, a slightly modified version of the scenario was repeated several times for each subject. The driver behaviour was then analysed using standard statistical tests. It was found that, in general, drivers keep most of their steering behaviour characteristics between test settings (unexpected and repeated). This is particularly interesting since a similar kind of behaviour preservation is generally not found in the case of braking behaviour. In fact, only one significant difference was found between the two test settings, namely regarding time-to-collision at steering initiation. In experiments involving both an unexpected event and several repeated events one can, at least in some cases, design the repeated event such that behavioural data collected from that setting can be used along with data from the unexpected setting. Using this procedure, one can significantly increase the amount of collected data, something that can strongly benefit, for example, driver modelling. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20141251 ST [electronic version only]
Source

European Transport Research Review, Vol. 6 (2014), No. 1 (March), p. 51-60, 15 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.