Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6576320 | Travel Behaviour and Society | 2018 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Pedal misapplications by drivers have received attention as being an underlying factor for the phenomenon known as sudden unintended acceleration (SUA) in vehicles. This research investigates behaviors during a common task for drivers, namely residential parking. Parking has been identified as a maneuver that is often linked with SUA mishaps. Using driving trajectories data from a set of four couples collected as part of a naturalistic driving study, we investigate whether consistent behaviors can be detected when parking at home from a geospatial perspective, i.e., whether deceleration and braking occur in a characteristic way at the end of a driving trajectory, and whether these behaviors vary when the geospatial context of parking changes. An ontology-based approach is used to frame the key behaviors of the naturalistic driving, and big data techniques are applied to extract parking-specific behaviors from driving trajectories. Results show that individuals showed relatively consistent parking behaviors under the same geospatial context and the standard deviation of the deceleration threshold has a larger discrepancy between couples parking at different residences than within couples where parking occurs at the same place.
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Authors
Kathleen Stewart, Junchuan Fan, Chris Schwarz, Daniel V. McGehee,