Distressed in the queue? Psychophysiological and behavioral evidence for two alternative car-following techniques
•The systematic adoption of safety distance was not the best car-following strategy.•Driving to keep Distance (DD) promoted higher speed variability.•Driving to keep Inertia (DI) required greater car-following distance.•Better health parameters (less crashes, distress, pollution) alienate with DI.•A...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Transportation research. Part F, Traffic psychology and behaviour Traffic psychology and behaviour, 2020-10, Vol.74, p.418-432 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •The systematic adoption of safety distance was not the best car-following strategy.•Driving to keep Distance (DD) promoted higher speed variability.•Driving to keep Inertia (DI) required greater car-following distance.•Better health parameters (less crashes, distress, pollution) alienate with DI.•A platoon of 8 virtual DD followers required less road space following a DI driver.
Nature offers numerous examples of animal species exhibiting harmonious collective movement. Unfortunately, the motorized Homo sapiens sapiens is not included and pays a price for it. Too often, drivers who simply follow other drivers are caught in the worst road threat after a crash: congestions. In the past, the solution to this problem has gone hand in hand with infrastructure investment. However, approaches such as the Nagoya Paradigm propose now to see congestion as the consequence of multiple interacting particles whose disturbances are transmitted in a waveform. This view clashes with a longlasting assumption ordering traffic flows, the rational driver postulate (i.e., drivers’ alleged propensity to maintain a safe distance). Rather than a mere coincidence, the worldwide adoption of the safety-distance tenet and the worldwide presence of congestion emerge now as cause and effect. Nevertheless, nothing in the drivers’ endowment impedes the adoption of other car-following (CF) strategies. The present study questions the a priori of safety-distance, comparing two elementary CF strategies, Driving to keep Distance (DD), that still prevails worldwide, and Driving to keep Inertia (DI), a complementary CF technique that offsets traffic waves disturbances, ensuring uninterrupted traffic flows. By asking drivers to drive DD and DI, we aim to characterize both CF strategies, comparing their effects on the individual driver (how he drives, how he feels, what he pays attention to) and also on the road space occupied by a platoon of DD robot-followers.
Thirty drivers (50% women) were invited to adopt DD/DI in a driving simulator following a swinging leader. The design was a repeated measures model controlling for order. The CF technique, DD or DI, was the within-subject factor. Order (DD-DI / DI-DD) was the between-subjects factor. There were four blocks of dependent measures: individual driving performance (accelerations, decelerations, crashes, distance to lead vehicle, speed and fuel consumption), emotional dimensions (measures of skin conductance and self-reports of affective states |
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ISSN: | 1369-8478 1873-5517 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.trf.2020.09.011 |