TY - JOUR PY - 2022// TI - Development of a simulation-based experimental research framework for the characterization of cannabis-related driving impairment JO - Transportation research interdisciplinary perspectives A1 - Thawer, Zayne A1 - Campos, Jennifer L. A1 - Keshavarz, Behrang A1 - Shewaga, Robert A1 - Furlan, Andrea D. A1 - Fernie, Geoff A1 - Haycock, Bruce SP - e100561 EP - e100561 VL - 13 IS - N2 - Recreational use of cannabis has been recently legalized in Canada, however, its impact on driving performance and safety is not well-defined. One experimental tool that can be implemented to better examine the link between cannabis use and driving impairment is driving simulation. Customized driving scenarios can be created to target and evaluate hypothesized effects of cannabis on driving behaviors. This paper presents a framework for the evidence-based design of driving scenarios that aim to characterize cannabis-related driving impairment. The framework begins by considering the effects of cannabis on sensory, motor, and cognitive abilities, as well as how impairments in these abilities could negatively affect driving performance. Next, we examine how these negative effects on driving could be measured in a controlled, repeatable, and safe manner using simulators, to map the specific effects of cannabis on particular aspects of driving performance. Last, we describe how customized driving simulator scenario elements could be designed to challenge the targeted driving abilities that are affected by cannabis. In addition to detailing this experimental framework, a prototype scenario developed for DriverLab at KITE - Toronto Rehabilitation Institute is presented, but the expectation is that the proposed approaches could be broadly implemented across a range of simulators. Keywords: Cannabis impaired driving
Language: en
LA - en SN - 2590-1982 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.trip.2022.100561 ID - ref1 ER -