Examination of distracted driving and yellow light running : analysis of simulator data


Autoria(s): Haque, Md. Mazharul; Ohlhauser, Amanda D.; Washington, Simon; Boyle , Linda Ng
Data(s)

2013

Resumo

Driving on an approach to a signalized intersection while distracted is particularly dangerous, as potential vehicular conflicts and resulting angle collisions tend to be severe. Given the prevalence and importance of this particular scenario, the decisions and actions of distracted drivers during the onset of yellow lights are the focus of this study. Driving simulator data were obtained from a sample of 58 drivers under baseline and handheld mobile phone conditions at the University of Iowa - National Advanced Driving Simulator. Explanatory variables included age, gender, cell phone use, distance to stop-line, and speed. Although there is extensive research on drivers’ responses to yellow traffic signals, the examination has been conducted from a traditional regression-based approach, which does not necessary provide the underlying relations and patterns among the sampled data. In this paper, we exploit the benefits of both classical statistical inference and data mining techniques to identify the a priori relationships among main effects, non-linearities, and interaction effects. Results suggest that novice (16-17 years) and young drivers’ (18-25 years) have heightened yellow light running risk while distracted by a cell phone conversation. Driver experience captured by age has a multiplicative effect with distraction, making the combined effect of being inexperienced and distracted particularly risky. Overall, distracted drivers across most tested groups tend to reduce the propensity of yellow light running as the distance to stop line increases, exhibiting risk compensation on a critical driving situation.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/57988/

Relação

http://amonline.trb.org/2vct3q/

Haque, Md. Mazharul, Ohlhauser, Amanda D., Washington, Simon, & Boyle , Linda Ng (2013) Examination of distracted driving and yellow light running : analysis of simulator data. In 92nd Annual Meeting of Transportation Research Board (TRB), 13-17 January 2013, Washington DC.

Fonte

Centre for Accident Research & Road Safety - Qld (CARRS-Q); School of Civil Engineering & Built Environment; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #090507 Transport Engineering #170299 Cognitive Science not elsewhere classified #Distracted driving #Mobile phone #Motion-based driving simulator #Risk compensation #Yellow light #Driver behavior
Tipo

Conference Paper