Abstract

Speeding is a major contributing factor to traffic crashes and frequently happens in areas where there is a mutation in speed limits, such as the transition zones that connect urban areas from rural areas. The purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of an in-vehicle audio warning system and lit speed limit sign on preventing drivers’ speeding behavior in transition zones. A high-fidelity driving simulator was used to establish a roadway network with the transition zone. A total of 41 participants were recruited for this experiment, and the driving speed performance data were collected from the simulator. The experimental results display that the implementation of the audio warning system could significantly reduce drivers’ operating speed before they entered the urban area, while the lit speed limit sign had a minimal effect on improving the drivers’ speed control performance. Without consideration of different types of speed limit signs, it is found that male drivers generally had a higher operating speed both upstream and in the transition zones and have a larger maximum deceleration for speed reduction than female drivers. Moreover, the drivers who had medium-level driving experience had the higher operating speed and were more likely to have speeding behaviors in the transition zones than those who had low-level and high-level driving experience in the transition zones.

Highlights

  • Speeding is one of the most common driving behaviors and is considered one of the largest contributors to road injuries and fatalities [1,2,3]

  • The purpose of this study is to investigate the impacts of the in-vehicle audio speeding warning system on drivers’ speed performance in transition zones based on driving simulator experiments

  • The location of the negative values and positive values stand for the distance before the speed limit sign and after the speed limit sign, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Speeding is one of the most common driving behaviors and is considered one of the largest contributors to road injuries and fatalities [1,2,3]. Statistics Yearbook has reported that a total of 8812 speeding-related traffic fatalities happened in 2011, which accounted for 14.13% of all traffic deaths [4]. In the United States, 32,719 traffic fatalities occurred in 2013, and among them, 9613 (29%) deaths were related to speeding, which resulted in $40.4 billion of annual economic cost to society [5]. Even small increases in speed could increase the probability of car accidents and the severity of the traffic crash, in crashes with pedestrians and cyclists [7,8,9,10]. A higher driving speed would contribute to the larger collision energy between vehicles, road users or obstacles [11]

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