Novice
Drivers Seldom Anticipate Danger on the Road,
UMass Researcher
Finds
Web-based driving scenarios are
aimed at helping solve the problem
AMHERST, Mass. -Younger, inexperienced
drivers seldom anticipate dangerous situations on the road,
according to recent research projects headed by University of
Massachusetts Amherst researcher Donald Fisher. In an effort to
address the problem, Fisher has expanded the projects by making
hazardous driving scenarios available on the Web, so that teenagers
can learn how to safely respond to unsafe situations. The findings
are detailed in a paper recently published in the journal Human
Factors and will be presented at the upcoming annual meetings of the
Transportation Research Board in Washington, D.C.. The research was
funded by the Link Foundation for Simulation and Training; the AAA
Foundation for Traffic Safety; and the Massachusetts Governor’s
Highway Safety Bureau.
"We
know that new drivers understand the basics of operating a car,"
said Fisher, "but problems arise when these new drivers are faced
with potentially hazardous situations, such as a hidden stop sign,
or a bicyclist riding toward a vehicle. Our research shows that,
unlike more experienced drivers, people who are new behind the wheel
don’t necessarily identify these situations as being potentially
dangerous, and therefore they often don’t respond in the safest way
possible."
The
study was conducted in the University’s Human Performance
Laboratory, a facility that features an advanced driving simulator
in which a sedan is placed before three screens, onto which highways
and neighborhoods are projected. The "car" reads the driver’s speed,
direction, and even eye movements as input. Researchers tested 24
teenagers and 48 more experienced drivers and then compared their
responses to various driving situations.
"We
tested the participants in the driving simulator, and followed their
eye movements, to determine whether they really know where the
danger is, and the simple fact is, they don’t," said Fisher. He used
the advanced driving simulator to evaluate the effects of training
and experience on drivers’ behavior in risky traffic situations.
The
series of virtual "drives" on the World Wide Web helps teach new
drivers to anticipate dangerous situations – without endangering
themselves or others. Fisher and his research team created a series
of 16 driving scenarios that teach new drivers to be alert to
situations that demand extra caution. The scenarios "drive" through
each situation, and then detail safe and unsafe responses. A
narrator describes the driving choices as the virtual car
moves.
In
an effort to make the driving scenarios as effective as possible,
Fisher is asking area driver-education teachers to look at the
program and offer responses on how it might be best used in a school
or driving-school setting. Toward that end, he has invited
driver-education teachers to a meeting at the University in early
December, to show them the programs and listen to their ideas.
In
one particular scenario, in which a driver’s view of the traffic in
the opposing lane across the intersection is partly blocked by a
truck slightly ahead of the driver and in the left-turn lane, almost
none of the new drivers, (defined as those on the road six months or
less), looked at the right-front corner of the truck to see whether
a vehicle might be turning from the opposing lane. However, 30
percent of 20-year-olds looked for danger, and 70 percent of
60-year-olds looked. "The younger drivers, for the most part, are
just not aware," said Fisher.
Fisher’s co-authors on the paper are N. E. Laurie of Kodak,
UMass alumnus Robert Glaser of Supply Chain Consultants, Karen
Connerney of IBM, John Brock of the Milestone Group, and UMass
psychology faculty members Alexander Pollatsek, and Susan
Duffy.
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Note: The scenarios are at www.ecs.umass.edu/hpl; click
on "Link Foundation."
Don Fisher can be reached at 413/545-1657
or fisher@ecs.umass.edu
A
meeting with teachers is scheduled for Tues., Dec. 3, from 6-8 p.m
in
Room 120D, Marston Hall. Dinner will be provided.
Teachers wishing to attend should contact Fisher
ASAP.
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