6533b7d7fe1ef96bd1268494

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Car following: Comparing distance-oriented vs. inertia-oriented driving techniques

Ana Mª Ferruz GraciaLuis Carlos Delgado PastorAntonio Lucas AlbaMª. Teresa Blanch MicóÓScar M. Melchor GalánTeresa Bellés RiveraFrancisco Ruíz JimenezMariano Chóliz Montañés

subject

EngineeringInjury controlmedia_common.quotation_subjectDriving techniquesGeography Planning and DevelopmentPoison controlTransportationInertia01 natural sciencesCar following0502 economics and business0103 physical sciences010306 general physicsSimulationAxiommedia_common050210 logistics & transportationCar-following modelsbusiness.industry05 social sciencesDriver behaviorDriving simulatorPsychological paradigmsTRIPS architecturebusinessConstant (mathematics)

description

The rationale behind most car-following (CF) models is the possibility to appraise and formalize how drivers naturally follow each other. Characterizing and parametrizing Normative Driving Behavior (NDB) became major goals, especially during the last 25 years. Most CF models assumed driver propensity for constant, safe distance is axiomatic. This paper challenges the idea of safety distance as the main parameter defining a unique (or natural) NDB. Instead, it states drivers can adapt to reactive and proactive car following. Drawing on recent CF models close to the Nagoya paradigm and on other phenomena (e.g., wave movement in Nature), we conceived car following by Driving to keep Inertia (DI) as an alternative to Driving to keep Distance (DD). On a driving simulator, three studies (N ¼ 113) based on a repeated-measures experimental design explored the efficiency of these elementary techniques by measuring individual driver performance (e.g., accelerations, decelerations, average speed, distance to leader). Drivers easily grasped and applied either technique and easily switched back and forth between the two. As an overall indicator, all the studies revealed DI trips use about 20% less fuel than DD trips do.

10.1016/j.tranpol.2017.05.008]http://hdl.handle.net/10481/56623