Abstract

Familiarity with a route is influenced by levels of dynamic and static knowledge about the route and the route network such as type of roads, infrastructure, traffic conditions, purpose of travel, weather, departure time, etc. To better understand and develop route choice models that can incorporate more meaningful representations of route familiarity, OBDII devices were installed in the vehicles of 32 drivers, 65 years and older, for a period of three months. Personalized web-based trip diaries were used to provide older drivers with post-trip feedback reports about their risky driving behaviors, and collect feedback about their route familiarity, preferences, and reasons for choosing the route driven vs. an alternate low-risk route. Feedback responses were analyzed and mapped onto an abstraction hierarchy framework, which showed that among older drivers, route familiarity depends not only on higher abstraction levels such as trip goals, purpose, and driving strategies, but also on the lower levels of demand on driving skills, and characteristics of road type. Additionally, gender differences were identified at the lower levels of the familiarity abstraction model, especially for driving challenges and the driving environment. Results from the analyses helped highlight the multi-faceted nature of route familiarity, which can be used to build the necessary levels of granularity for modelling and interpretation of spatial and contextual route choice recommendation systems for specific population groups such as older drivers.

Highlights

  • A number of studies have established the role of familiarity as an important factor for driving

  • To determine the different factors within the abstraction hierarchy levels that contribute to route familiarity among older drivers, 32 drivers, 65 years and older, were recruited for the study

  • A summary of the risky driving behavior events recorded from the OBDII device across the trips driven during the three-month period is shown in Percent of Trips Driven by Older Drivers With

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A number of studies have established the role of familiarity as an important factor for driving. Familiarity is commonly assessed by either the expectancy of the driver (travel time, travel distance, traffic conditions, weather), prior driving experience with the route (knowledge of the route attributes, road characteristics, driving environment), personal characteristics of the driver (socioeconomic, choice preference), trip characteristics (purpose, time of day), or the referent frequencies of the route learnt by driving the same routes. Most studies relied on simulator environments due to the technology limitations and costs associated with capturing and assessing large naturalistic driving data.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call