Abstract

The electrification of vehicles is without a doubt one of the milestones of today’s automotive technology. Even though industry actors perceive it as a future standard, acceptance, and adoption of this kind of vehicles by the end user remain a huge challenge. One of the main issues is the range anxiety related to the electric vehicle’s remaining battery level. In the scope of the H2020 ADAS&ME project, we designed and developed an intelligent Human Machine Interface (HMI) to ease acceptance of Electric Vehicle (EV) technology. This HMI is mounted on a fake autonomous vehicle piloted by a hidden joystick (called Wizard of Oz (WoZ) driving). We examined 22 inexperienced EV drivers during a one-hour driving task tailored to generate range anxiety. According to our protocol, once the remaining battery level started to become critical after manual driving, the HMI proposed accurate coping techniques to inform the drivers how to reduce the power consumption of the vehicle. In the following steps of the protocol, the vehicle was totally out of battery, and the drivers had to experience an emergency stop. The first result of this paper was that an intelligent HMI could reduce the range anxiety of the driver by proposing adapted coping strategies (i.e., transmitting how to save energy when the vehicle approaches a traffic light). The second result was that such an HMI and automated driving to a safe spot could reduce the stress of the driver when an emergency stop is necessary.

Highlights

  • The concept of range anxiety emerged in the late 1990s regarding the concern of being unable to reach the destination or the charging spot while traveling in an Electric Vehicle (EV) [1]

  • These coping strategies respond to the need of understanding how their driving behavior can maximize economy, and on the other hand, we address the range anxiety issue by accelerating the acceptance and the understanding of EV power consumption

  • Familiarity with Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) systems was another criterion: only drivers familiar at least with speed limiter/regulator or Adaptive Cruise Control (ACC) technologies were selected, as they were considered to be more receptive to the proposed coping strategies

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Summary

Introduction

The concept of range anxiety (or range paradox) emerged in the late 1990s regarding the concern of being unable to reach the destination or the charging spot while traveling in an EV [1]. The four important physical parameters that could make a difference in range anxiety level are the following [5],

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