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French National Institute for Transport. and Safety Research (INRETS) ... Vehicle Cockpit Design. animals. architecture. billboards. construction zones/equipment ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Titre de votre prsentation


1

PART 1 INTRODUCTION TO DRIVER DISTRACTION
THEORY, EFFECTS AND MITIGATION Michael Regan,
PhD Adjunct Professor Research Director French
National Institute for Transport and Safety
Research (INRETS)
2

PART 1 Introduction to Driver Distraction
Theory, Effects and Mitigation Michael Regan,
PhD Adjunct Professor Senior Research
Fellow Monash University Accident Research
Centre (MUARC)
3
Lyon, France

4
Acknowledgements
  • Dr Angus McIntosh
  • Professor Rod McClure
  • NRMA-ACT Road Safety Trust
  • Mr Eddie Wheeler
  • Taylor and Francis Publishing
  • Company (CRC Press)
  • Monash University Accident
  • Research Centre (MUARC)
  • French National Institute for
  • Transport and Safety Research
  • (INRETS)
  • General Motors Holden
  • US National Highway Traffic Safety
  • Administration (NHTSA)
  • Co-editors John Lee/Kristie Young
  • .and you!

5
Overview
  • Introduction to the book
  • Effects of distraction on driving, crashes and
    crash risk
  • Prevention and mitigation strategies

6
CU1
  • See you at one oclock this afternoon...

7
Driver Distraction Theory, Effects and
Mitigation
  • Definition
  • The diversion of attention away from activities
    critical for safe driving, toward a competing
    activity.
  • Regan, Lee and Young (2008)

8
Attention Can Be Diverted by
  • things we see
  • things we hear
  • things we smell
  • things we feel
  • things we taste
  • things we daydream
  • about

9
The impact of distraction depends on
  • driving demands
  • nature and demands of
  • competing task
  • driver characteristics
  • driver state
  • exposure
  • where and when
  • vehicle/road distraction
  • tolerance

10
Sources of Distraction Inside and Outside
Vehicle
  • 70 - inside vehicle
  • 30 - outside vehicle
  • 20 - involve driver interaction with technology

11
Sources of Distraction Categories and
Avoidability
  • Things brought into vehicle - 92
  • Vehicle systems - 67
  • Vehicle occupants - 33
  • Moving object in vehicle - 50
  • Internalized activity - 56
  • External objects, events,
  • and activities - 31

12
Some Features of Distraction
  • intentional or involuntary
  • biologically advantageous
  • often can be controlled by
  • drivers
  • includes some driving
  • tasks

13
The Status Quo
  • few prevention and mitigation programs
  • evaluation data almost non-existent
  • what about distracted walking? Distracted
    riding?

14
Key Stakeholders
  • road users
  • vehicle manufacturers
  • road safety authorities
  • Police
  • the media
  • motoring clubs
  • equipment manufacturers/suppliers
  • standards organisations
  • driver trainers
  • academics
  • researchers
  • etc

15
Contributions of the book
  • brings together a large volume of accumulated
    knowledge
  • furthers the understanding of distraction, its
    mechanisms, its measurement and its impact
  • provides comprehensive options for prevention
    and mitigation

16
Content
  • definition of distraction
  • theory of distraction
  • taxonomy of sources
  • measurement methods
  • impact of distraction on crashes and
  • risk
  • mediating factors
  • guidelines and standards
  • practical prevention and mitigation
  • strategies

17

PART 3 PREVENTING AND MITIGATING THE EFFECTS
OF DISTRACTION Michael Regan, PhD
18
History
  • early days for countermeasure
  • for distraction
  • but not surprising
  • effectiveness data is scarce
  • the book presents options not
  • prescriptions for
  • countermeasure development

19
A government perspective
  • distraction is a serious problem
  • distraction exists now and will exist in the
    future
  • distraction must be taken into account for all
    systems, products and services
  • distraction should both be reduced, as well as
    prepared for, in a safe system approach to
    distraction management
  • understand possible negative behavioural
    adaption arising from driver interaction with
    distraction mitigation technology
  • (ClaesTingvall in Regan, Lee and Young, 2008,
    Chapter 33)

20
Prevention and mitigation options
  • data collection
  • legislation and enforcement
  • vehicle fleet management
  • driver licensing
  • education and training
  • vehicle design
  • technology design
  • road design

21
Data collection
  • need a common definition of distraction
  • need taxonomy for classifying sources of
    distraction
  • improve processes for collecting and analyzing
    distraction-related data
  • expand data collection to other road users

22
Publicity
  • Driving public has little understanding of
  • high risk distractions
  • relative risks
  • impact of distraction on performance and safety
  • moderating factors
  • coping strategies
  • existing and revised penalties
  • Perception that the risk of being apprehended for
    violating distraction laws is low

23
Education Training
  • well-designed and evaluated training programs
    work
  • distraction largely neglected in driver education
    and training programs
  • the number of distractionrelated initiatives is
    limited
  • used Goals for Driver Education (GDE) matrix as
    framework for defining 60 distraction-related
    competencies

24
Education Training
  • Cell 3 (Vehicle Maneuvering Self Evaluation) -
    This cell pertains to awareness and
    self-evaluation of personal strengths and
    weaknesses in relation to driving skills,
    maneuvering in hazardous situations, and so on.
  • make drivers reflect on their own strengths and
    weaknesses in their ability to limit distraction
    when using vehicle systems, design features and
    functions
  • expose drivers, in a safe environment, to
    distractions deriving from inappropriate
    operation of vehicle systems, design features and
    functions within vehicles they drive to enable
    them to reflect and become self-aware of the
    impact of these distractions on their driving
    performance
  • to support feedback control by making drivers
    self-aware of the effects of distraction deriving
    from inappropriate operation of vehicle systems,
    design features and functions which have no overt
    impact on performance in normal conditions (e.g.,
    cognitive distraction when talking on a mobile
    phone) but which have potential to compromise
    performance and safety in safety-critical
    situations (e.g., when a pedestrian unexpectedly
    steps out from behind a parked car).

25
Legislation
  • Good distraction laws
  • data-driven
  • no loop-holes
  • justifiable on road safety grounds
  • enforceable, and place minimal burden on Police
    in observing and documenting behaviour
  • keep pace with technological developments
  • regularly evaluated and refined
  • recognize that drivers are in some situations
    biologically and socially primed to be distracted
  • have full support of judges and prosecutors

26
Employers
  • Can influence driving behaviour at all levels of
    control
  • at the strategic level
  • at the tactical level
  • at the operational level

27
Driver licensing
  • licensing handbooks
  • knowledge tests
  • practical driving tests
  • graduated licensing

28
Vehicle Cockpit Design
  • can prevent and mitigate distraction in design
    phase and during driving (ie in real time)
  • book adresses in-built systems, technologies
    brought into vehicles, and retrofitted systems

29
Road Design
  • animals
  • architecture
  • billboards
  • construction zones/equipment
  • crash scenes
  • incidents
  • insects
  • landmarks
  • road signs
  • other road users
  • scenery
  • vehicles
  • weather phenomena

30
Conclusions
  • distraction a significant problem
  • will never be eradicated
  • will get bigger without action
  • impact mediated by many factors
  • must stop blaming the driver
  • we can do much more
  • drivers not the only ones distracted
  • not all distraction is bad distraction

31
To order the book
  • see promotional flyers
  • Google the title of the book to find
    distribution outlets

32
  • michael.regan_at_inrets.fr
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