Modeling Driver Behavior and Driver Aggressiveness Using Biobehavioral Methods - Phase I

It is well known that driver inattention and human error are the primary causes of traffic accidents. In addition, existing driver behavioral modeling algorithms (e.g., car-following, lane changing) assume that driver variability is expressed through various distributions and random number generators. What constitutes aggressive driving, and which are the actions of aggressive drivers that negatively affect safety and traffic instability, are some of the topics that have not been studied thoroughly. At the same time, significant work has been done in the field of cognitive science and psychology, with emphasis in understanding, modeling, and predicting drivers’ intended actions. The goal of this research is to investigate the linkage between different driver profiles with both traffic stability and the probability of being involved in risk-taking behaviors, borrowing concepts from the fields of cognitive science and psychology. Participants with different driving habits and levels of aggressiveness will be invited to participate in driving simulator experiments, where they will be asked to drive under different geometric, control, and traffic scenarios, that may additionally vary on the level of moral decision making involved. Various metrics related to drivers’ reaction times, gap acceptance, car-following, and lane changing activity will be measured through the driving simulator experiments. Additional behavioral and psychophysical measures will be collected through electroencephalogram recordings (EEG) during the simulator experiments, and through questionnaires. These data will result in the identification of measurable behavioral parameters and their inter-driver heterogeneity. It is expected that these parameters will be used in subsequent projects to refine or develop enhanced driver behavior models that account for both safety and traffic instabilities.

Language

  • English

Project

  • Status: Completed
  • Funding: $168517
  • Contract Numbers:

    69A3551747107

  • Sponsor Organizations:

    Mid-America Transportation Center

    University of Nebraska-Lincoln
    2200 Vine Street, PO Box 830851
    Lincoln, NE  United States  68583-0851

    Office of the Assistant Secretary for Research and Technology

    University Transportation Centers Program
    Department of Transportation
    Washington, DC  United States  20590
  • Managing Organizations:

    Mid-America Transportation Center

    University of Nebraska-Lincoln
    2200 Vine Street, PO Box 830851
    Lincoln, NE  United States  68583-0851
  • Project Managers:

    Stearns, Amy

  • Performing Organizations:

    University of Kansas, Lawrence

    Department of Civil Engineering, 2006 Learned Hall
    Lawrence, KS  United States  66045-2225
  • Principal Investigators:

    Kondyli, Alexandra

  • Start Date: 20170715
  • Expected Completion Date: 20181204
  • Actual Completion Date: 20181231
  • USDOT Program: University Transportation Centers
  • Source Data: RiP Project 91994-16

Subject/Index Terms

Filing Info

  • Accession Number: 01659673
  • Record Type: Research project
  • Source Agency: Mid-America Transportation Center
  • Contract Numbers: 69A3551747107
  • Files: UTC, RIP
  • Created Date: Feb 8 2018 7:16PM