Effects of a driver assistance system with foresighted deceleration control on the driving performance of elderly and younger drivers
•Deceleration control was designed to guide a driver to hazard-anticipatory driving.•Effects of this approach were investigated by conducting a public-road experiment.•We compared how elderly and younger drivers handled blind intersections.•Vehicle slowdown enabled drivers to perform safety confirma...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Transportation research. Part F, Traffic psychology and behaviour Traffic psychology and behaviour, 2021-02, Vol.77, p.221-235 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Deceleration control was designed to guide a driver to hazard-anticipatory driving.•Effects of this approach were investigated by conducting a public-road experiment.•We compared how elderly and younger drivers handled blind intersections.•Vehicle slowdown enabled drivers to perform safety confirmation near blind spots.•This approach could be effective for both elderly and younger drivers.
It is imperative to enhance the safety of elderly individuals on the roads to ensure the quality of their daily life. Near-miss incidents or accidents at blind intersections often result from a conflict between the behaviors of the driver and of other road users (pedestrians and cyclists). The failure to search for potential conflict in the context of blind intersections is a concern pertaining to road safety. The proposed assistance system performs a proactive braking intervention to achieve a referenced velocity in uncertain situations, such as one in which an unobserved pedestrian might initiate a road crossing. The proactive braking intervention attempts to manage the potential risk of crashing with respect to covert hazards. Because an automated system may impair a human’s ability to perceive and respond to hazardous situations while driving, this study was designed to examine the effects of proactive braking intervention and visual support cues on elderly and younger drivers’ ability to respond to information about potentially hazardous situations. We conducted a public-road driving experiment involving 108 elderly and younger drivers from two non-overlapping age groups. It was observed that the vehicle slowdown realized through the proactive braking intervention enabled the drivers to perform safety confirmation near blind spots and caused them to be more sensitive to and wary of potential hazards. This approach could be effective not only for elderly drivers, but also for young or inexperienced ones. |
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ISSN: | 1369-8478 1873-5517 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.trf.2020.12.017 |