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Interactions between Cars and Motorcycles: Testing Underlying Concepts through Integration of On-Road and Simulator Studies
Author(s) -
Michael G. Lenné,
Paul M. Salmon,
Vanessa Beanland,
Guy H. Walker,
Geoff Underwood,
Ashleigh Filtness
Publication year - 2013
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.17077/drivingassessment.1500
Subject(s) - safer , driving simulator , transport engineering , underpinning , countermeasure , pedestrian , simulation , engineering , schema (genetic algorithms) , poison control , computer science , applied psychology , computer security , psychology , civil engineering , medicine , environmental health , machine learning , aerospace engineering
We conducted on-road and simulator studies to explore the mechanisms underpinning driver-rider crashes. In Study 1 the verbal protocols of 40 drivers and riders were assessed at intersections as part of a 15km on-road route in Melbourne. Network analysis of the verbal transcripts highlighted key differences in the situation awareness of drivers and riders at intersections. In a further study using a driving simulator we examined in car drivers the influence of acute exposure to motorcyclists. In a 15 min simulated drive, 40 drivers saw either no motorcycles or a high number of motorcycles in the surrounding traffic. In a subsequent 45-60 min drive, drivers were asked to detect motorcycles in traffic. The proportion of motorcycles was manipulated so that there was either a high (120) or low (6) number of motorcycles during the drive. Those drivers exposed to a high number of motorcycles were significantly faster at detecting motorcycles. Fundamentally, the incompatible situation awareness at intersections by drivers and riders underpins the conflicts. Study 2 offers some suggestion for a countermeasure here, although more research around schema and exposure training to support safer interactions is needed.

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