Emergency Autonomous to Manual Takeover in a Driving Simulator: Teen vs. Adult Drivers – A Pilot Study

2018-01-0499

04/03/2018

Event
WCX World Congress Experience
Authors Abstract
Content
Autonomous and/or automated vehicles offer a host of future opportunities but leave many questions unanswered regarding their impact on crash avoidance or the ability of drivers to effectively scan and re-engage from self-driving mode when necessary to avoid crash scenarios. Considering a 16-year-old is several times more likely to die in an automobile crash than other licensed drivers, it was crucial to test both teenage drivers and adults to determine head-on collision avoidance abilities when subjected to a failing autopilot in a simulated autonomous vehicle. In this study, eight teenagers ages 16-19 and four experienced adults underwent four simulated drives (one manual practice drive and three simulated autonomous drives) using a hi-fidelity, Real Time Technologies SimDriver Simulator to represent being in a self-driving vehicle. When exposed to a head-on crash event where the opposing vehicle crosses the dividing line and drives towards the subject, most subjects successfully swerved to avoid the car albeit with several oscillations before stabilization.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2018-01-0499
Pages
4
Citation
Belwadi, A., Loeb, H., Shen, M., Shaikh, S. et al., "Emergency Autonomous to Manual Takeover in a Driving Simulator: Teen vs. Adult Drivers – A Pilot Study," SAE Technical Paper 2018-01-0499, 2018, https://doi.org/10.4271/2018-01-0499.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 3, 2018
Product Code
2018-01-0499
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English