Effects of Various Causal Factors on Car-Following Behavior.

Author(s)
Kim, T. Lovell, D.J. & Oh, C.
Year
Abstract

Most previous car-following models use only a simple set of kinematic variables, such as relative spacings and speeds, instantaneous speeds, etc., to determine subsequent behavior. Hence, they provide very limited understanding of the variation of following behavior within and across drivers and neglect numerous other causal factors that may be influential to the car-following behavior. In fact, there are numerous other causal factors besides basic kinematics that may influence car-following behavior, such as various human characteristics (e.g., gender, environmental conditions like telephoning, vehicle occupancy (distraction level)), traffic and road characteristics (e.g., type of vehicle, congestion level, and location of driving lane), and environmental characteristics (e.g., time of day and weathercondition). This study identified various causal factors affecting the driving behavior of the following vehicle through appropriate field experiments and investigated the relationships between those factors and the following vehicle’s behavior.

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Publication

Library number
C 46739 (In: C 46669 CD-ROM) /83 / ITRD E852428
Source

In: ITS in daily life : proceedings of the 16th World Congress on Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS), Stockholm, Sweden, September 21-25, 2009, 12 p.

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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.