Harsh braking by truck drivers : a comparison of thresholds and driving contexts using naturalistic driving data.

Author(s)
Jansen, R.J. & Wesseling, S.
Year
Abstract

Frequent harsh braking is an example of risky driving behaviour by truck drivers. This study explored how threshold values on longitudinal deceleration affect the detection rate of harsh braking events across driving contexts. Naturalistic driving data from the EU project UDRIVE was used to study the behaviour of 24 Dutch truck drivers. Harsh braking events were identified through longitudinal deceleration using an initial threshold of 3.0 m/s2. The maximum deceleration in each event was used to stratify the events, covering a range of threshold values found in previous studies. In total 2031 events were found. For each speed limit the mean event rate was calculated across drivers. The event rate at urban roads (30, 50 km/h) was significantly higher than at rural roads (60/80 km/h), which in turn was significantly higher than at highways (100, 120+ km/h). Drivers with a high event rate at urban roads also showed a high event rate at rural roads and highways, but only for thresholds up to 4.0 m/s2). Finally, distinct event rate distributions were found when the threshold value was manipulated. Results suggest that driving context influences harsh braking behaviour, and that drivers have distinct driving styles. The implications are discussed for in-vehicle monitoring systems and driver coaching. (Author/publisher)

Request publication

6 + 1 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

Publication

Library number
20190048 ST [electronic version only]
Source

In: Proceedings of the 6th Humanist Conference, The Hague, Netherlands, June 13-14, 2018, 6 p., 13 ref.

SWOV publication

This is a publication by SWOV, or that SWOV has contributed to.