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Journal Article

Citation

Naujoks F, Totzke I. Transp. Res. F Traffic Psychol. Behav. 2014; 26: 49-61.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.trf.2014.06.010

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Wireless communication technologies (e.g., C2X-communication or mobile telephony and broadcasting) make it possible to forewarn drivers of dangerous traffic situations. Using a motion-based driving simulator with N = 16 participants, it has already been possible to illustrate an increase in traffic safety based on early, precise congestion tail warnings on motorways (Totzke, Naujoks, Mühlbacher, & Krüger, 2011). The paper at hand presents an additional evaluation of the study with regard to (negative) 'behavioral adaptation'; that is to say, non-intended changes in driving behavior based on the introduction of congestion tail warnings. As part of the above-mentioned study, older and younger participants drove through road sections with different traffic conditions (free flow vs. synchronized traffic) performing different test situations (approaching different congestion tails with vs. without assistance of the warning system). In order to investigate behavioral adaptation effects, drivers completed additional road sections in which congestion tail situations were possible, but did not occur. In these situations, an in-vehicle warning device displayed that a congestion tail warning was possible ('assistance possible') or not ('assistance not possible'). During test drives with potential assistance, negative behavioral adaptations can be found: (1) increase of maximum speed, (2) decrease of minimum time-to-collision (TTCmin) when following another vehicle in free flow traffic and (3) increased intensity of performing a secondary task compared to driving without assistance. The reduction in TTCmin-values applied in particular to older drivers, whereas an increased secondary task involvement was mainly found among younger drivers during synchronized traffic. The results indicate that the introduction of predictive warning systems may cause behavioral adaptations that may limit the intended safety effect of the warning system. With this in mind, it is advisable to include the assessment of (negative) behavioral adaptations into research concepts when evaluating predictive warning systems.

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