Abstract

Autonomous vehicle (AV) technology has advanced rapidly in recent years with some automated features already available in vehicles on the market. AVs are expected to reduce traffic crashes as the majority of crashes are related to driver errors, fatigue, alcohol, or drugs. However, very little research has been conducted to estimate the safety impact of AVs. This paper aims to investigate the safety impacts of AVs using a simulation-based surrogate safety measure approach. To this end, safety impacts are explored through the number of conflicts extracted from the VISSIM traffic microsimulator using the Surrogate Safety Assessment Model (SSAM). Behaviours of human-driven vehicles (HVs) and AVs (level 4 automation) are modelled within the VISSIM’s car-following model. The safety investigation is conducted for two case studies, that is, a signalised intersection and a roundabout, under various AV penetration rates. Results suggest that AVs improve safety significantly with high penetration rates, even when they travel with shorter headways to improve road capacity and reduce delay. For the signalised intersection, AVs reduce the number of conflicts by 20% to 65% with the AV penetration rates of between 50% and 100% (statistically significant at p<0.05). For the roundabout, the number of conflicts is reduced by 29% to 64% with the 100% AV penetration rate (statistically significant at p<0.05).

Highlights

  • Autonomous vehicle (AV) technology has advanced significantly in recent years

  • Results suggest that safety benefits of AVs can be achieved without compromising positive impacts on capacity associated with shorter headways

  • This paper has investigated the safety impact of autonomous vehicles (AVs) using traffic microsimulation and Surrogate Safety Assessment Model (SSAM)

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Summary

Introduction

Autonomous vehicle (AV) technology has advanced significantly in recent years. Automakers have already provided vehicles with some automated features (e.g., self-parking) and crash avoidance features such as automated braking, forward collision warning, lane departure warning, and blind spot monitoring [1, 2]. AV testing and piloting have begun in various countries. By 2014, AV testing on roadways has been legalised in four states in the US. In Australia, AV testing has been first introduced in South Australia’s roadways in 2016 [3]. The market penetration rate of AVs is estimated to be between 24% and 87% by 2045 [4, 5]

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