1 / 17

The effect of in-vehicle warning systems on speed compliance in work zones 報告者:楊子群

The effect of in-vehicle warning systems on speed compliance in work zones 報告者:楊子群. James Whitmire II a,⇑, Justin F. Morgan, Tal Oron-Gilad c, P.A. Hancock. Goals and Hypotheses. Research was to investigate the effectiveness of in-vehicle information technologies to

ally
Download Presentation

The effect of in-vehicle warning systems on speed compliance in work zones 報告者:楊子群

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The effect of in-vehicle warning systems on speed compliance in work zones報告者:楊子群 James Whitmire II a,⇑, Justin F. Morgan, Tal Oron-Gilad c, P.A. Hancock

  2. Goals and Hypotheses • Research was to investigate the effectiveness of in-vehicle information technologies to • influence driver speed compliance in work zones.

  3. Reference

  4. Participants • 60 participants (27 males, 33 females). • Driver’s license with at least 3 years of driving experience. • Age:20-63 years. • Mean age:33 years, standard deviation:12years. • Normal hearing and had normal or corrected to normal vision.

  5. Apparatus • General Electric fixed-base, I-Sim Patrol Sim driving simulator(three flat screens) • National Instruments LabVIEW • This software, integrated with the simulator, recorded all information on the simulator network at a rate of 60 Hz /每秒60次 • (e.g., steering movement, brake and throttle inputs, and vehicle speed and position relative to other objects) • Bluetooth wireless connection • HP IPaq hx4700 Pocket PC • Visual warnings • 0.5 s on and 0.5 s off. • Small speaker • Auditory warnings • Male’s voice • Presented at 60 dbc

  6. Experimental design and procedures Stop sign 8.9 km 2.1 km 105 khp 40 khp 7 min • Stop sign • One single right turn

  7. Experimental design and procedures STEP1=>Participants were randomly assigned to one of the three stated levels. (auditory, visual, or nowarning) STEP2=> informed consent process STEP3=> filled out 1.simulation sickness questionnaire as a pre-screening device 2.driving history questionnaire STEP4=> given a scripted verbal overview of the simulator followed by a orientation drive. STEP5=> pre-NASA-TLX STEP6=> began the actual test drive(approximately 7 min) STEP7=> post-experience instance of the simulation sickness questionnaire and NASA-TLX

  8. Measures of driver response • Speed before and within the work zone • Total time in work zone • Total time in violation • Number of violations • Duration of violations • Lane deviation, acceleration, braking, and steering • Subjective mental workload • pre-post

  9. Speed before and within the work zone • pre-entry driving speeds, served to demonstrate that there were no significant • 24 s and 32 s post-work zone seed have significant.

  10. Total time in work zone Analysis of variance revealed a marginal effect for total time in work zone F(2, 57) = 3.35, p = .08 Via Tukey’s procedure in a pairwise fashion:

  11. Total time in violation The results for total time in violation showed statistically significant differences, F(2, 57) = 5.05, p < .01. post hoc comparisons with the use of the Dunnett’s C test:

  12. Number of violations showed no significant differences between these respective violation levels (p > .25).

  13. Duration of violations The ANOVA indicated significant differences F(2, 59) = 8.81, p = .0005. Tukey-HSD revealed:

  14. Lane deviation, acceleration, braking, and steering • lateral position following entrance into the work zone and subsequent vehicle position • for the first 110 s of the test scenario. • No significant differences between observed measures.

  15. Subjective mental workload • (pre–post) measures were significantly different. • Physical demand increased, t(19) = 2.82, p < .05 • Effort increased, t(19) = 2.44, p < .05 • Frustration decreased, t(19) = 3.52, p < .05

  16. Multimodal presentation of these types of messages to be clearly received by the driver, with only a minimal change in cognitive workload. • lack of other dynamic elements in the simulation as the driver traveled through the environment alone with nocompanion or on-coming traffic. • results confirmthat the audio modality is an effective channel through which to cue the driver during a critical event. • results suggest there are indeed better ways to cue the driver to his or her speed within a work zone ascompared toregular road signage

  17. Providing more efficient information communication to the driver will potentially prove most beneficial. • Driver message should begin with brief auditory and visual messages. • (of duration no greater than a few seconds) • Followed by only a visual warning message which remains visible until compliance or acknowledgment. • In closing,further research is called for in the specific auditory and visual characteristics of such messages.

More Related