Driver adaptation to changes in road environment

Human behavioural factors have been found to be a major contributor to traffic crashes. Driving tasks such as speed regulation and hazard recognition are excellent evaluative tools to assess driver behaviour. Having excellent driving skill and responding well to hazards will help to minimise driver’...

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Main Author: Tay, Suet Ki
Other Authors: Lum Kit Meng
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/71730
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-717302023-03-03T17:16:42Z Driver adaptation to changes in road environment Tay, Suet Ki Lum Kit Meng School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Centre for Infrastructure Systems DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Transportation Human behavioural factors have been found to be a major contributor to traffic crashes. Driving tasks such as speed regulation and hazard recognition are excellent evaluative tools to assess driver behaviour. Having excellent driving skill and responding well to hazards will help to minimise driver’s crash involvement. Literature research revealed that though factors such as age, gender and driving experience play an important role in determining driver behaviour, external factors in the road environment also have huge effects on driver behaviour. Most relevant studies have been done overseas. Thus, this study aims to investigate the relationship between driver behaviour and the surrounding road environment on Singapore roads using a driving simulator. Forty consenting male and female young participants with valid driving licences were randomly recruited to participate in a two-hour long simulated driving experiment. The participants went through three sessions of virtual driving course in a simulator placed in the laboratory. The first and second sessions assessed changes in driver behaviour due to a difference in lane width while the third session assessed participants’ risk perception in various hazardous traffic scenarios. Experimental data for three driver behaviour indicators (i.e. speed control, lateral position, driver’s response latency) were extracted and analysed. Results obtained show that variations in the road environment have a marginal impact on driver behaviour. Narrow lane is perceived to be more dangerous and thus should be associated with a smaller lateral offset and lower speed. However, in this study, higher speed and smaller lateral position were observed in the narrower lane. Differences between both the average speed and lateral position of participants in both wider and narrower lane are found to be statistically insignificant at 0.05 level. Hence, future researches are recommended to experiment with a greater range of road width which will certainly increase participant’s explicit awareness of the changes. It is also observed that criticality of the hazards affects drivers’ response latencies such that their reaction time in scenarios involving vehicle-vehicle collision were consistently found to be shorter than those that involved vehicle-pedestrian collision as consequences of collision with vehicles are perceived to be more critical. However, when the analysis is done to compare scenarios involving the same type of hazard but of different level of expectancy in the events, inconsistent observations were found across the different types of hazard. Future researches are recommended to conduct further experiment on the same topic but with more scenarios involving the same types of hazard so as to obtain a more significant conclusion. Bachelor of Engineering (Civil) 2017-05-19T02:01:48Z 2017-05-19T02:01:48Z 2017 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/71730 en Nanyang Technological University 56 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Transportation
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Transportation
Tay, Suet Ki
Driver adaptation to changes in road environment
description Human behavioural factors have been found to be a major contributor to traffic crashes. Driving tasks such as speed regulation and hazard recognition are excellent evaluative tools to assess driver behaviour. Having excellent driving skill and responding well to hazards will help to minimise driver’s crash involvement. Literature research revealed that though factors such as age, gender and driving experience play an important role in determining driver behaviour, external factors in the road environment also have huge effects on driver behaviour. Most relevant studies have been done overseas. Thus, this study aims to investigate the relationship between driver behaviour and the surrounding road environment on Singapore roads using a driving simulator. Forty consenting male and female young participants with valid driving licences were randomly recruited to participate in a two-hour long simulated driving experiment. The participants went through three sessions of virtual driving course in a simulator placed in the laboratory. The first and second sessions assessed changes in driver behaviour due to a difference in lane width while the third session assessed participants’ risk perception in various hazardous traffic scenarios. Experimental data for three driver behaviour indicators (i.e. speed control, lateral position, driver’s response latency) were extracted and analysed. Results obtained show that variations in the road environment have a marginal impact on driver behaviour. Narrow lane is perceived to be more dangerous and thus should be associated with a smaller lateral offset and lower speed. However, in this study, higher speed and smaller lateral position were observed in the narrower lane. Differences between both the average speed and lateral position of participants in both wider and narrower lane are found to be statistically insignificant at 0.05 level. Hence, future researches are recommended to experiment with a greater range of road width which will certainly increase participant’s explicit awareness of the changes. It is also observed that criticality of the hazards affects drivers’ response latencies such that their reaction time in scenarios involving vehicle-vehicle collision were consistently found to be shorter than those that involved vehicle-pedestrian collision as consequences of collision with vehicles are perceived to be more critical. However, when the analysis is done to compare scenarios involving the same type of hazard but of different level of expectancy in the events, inconsistent observations were found across the different types of hazard. Future researches are recommended to conduct further experiment on the same topic but with more scenarios involving the same types of hazard so as to obtain a more significant conclusion.
author2 Lum Kit Meng
author_facet Lum Kit Meng
Tay, Suet Ki
format Final Year Project
author Tay, Suet Ki
author_sort Tay, Suet Ki
title Driver adaptation to changes in road environment
title_short Driver adaptation to changes in road environment
title_full Driver adaptation to changes in road environment
title_fullStr Driver adaptation to changes in road environment
title_full_unstemmed Driver adaptation to changes in road environment
title_sort driver adaptation to changes in road environment
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/71730
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