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Journal Article

Citation

Rahman A, Lownes NE. Transp. Res. F Traffic Psychol. Behav. 2012; 15(4): 395-403.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.trf.2012.03.004

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This paper investigates the impact of rainfall on the behavior of drivers in a car-following state by analyzing the differences in time gap, speed, and following distance of platooned vehicles between no-rain and rainy weather conditions on a two-lane rural state highway. Time gap, following distance, and individual vehicle speed were observed. Platooned vehicles were identified by a maximum time gap threshold of 4 s, allowing for interactions between vehicles beyond perception-reaction time. Rainfall intensity was utilized as the measure of local precipitation conditions and was categorized according to American Meteorological Society standards. The analysis showed that rainy weather conditions were strongly correlated with greater spread in speed distributions when compared to dry conditions. Further, the shift from no-rain to rain showed an increase in time gap and a reduction in speed. No statistically significant differences were observed between following distances in any weather conditions - suggesting that drivers tend to maintain following distance irrespective of weather conditions and speed reduction causes the observed time gap increase. This is supported by the observed 5.6% decrease in mean time gap - from 1.97 s to 2.1 s and the 3.7% decrease in mean speed - from 47 mph (75.6 km/h) to 45.3 mph (72.9 km/h).

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