U.S. Department of Transportation
Federal Highway Administration
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE
Washington, DC 20590
202-366-4000
Federal Highway Administration Research and Technology
Coordinating, Developing, and Delivering Highway Transportation Innovations
Project Information | ||
Project ID: | FHWA-PROJ-09-0067 | |
Project Name: | Making Driving Simulators More Useful for Behavioral Research | |
Project Status: | Completed | |
Start Date: | November 12, 2009 | |
End Date: | June 30, 2013 | |
Contact Information | ||
Last Name: | Philips | |
First Name: | Brian | |
Telephone: | 202-493-3468 | |
E-mail: | brian.philips@dot.gov | |
Office: | Office of Safety Research and Development | |
Team: | Human Factors Team [HRDS-30] | |
Program: | Exploratory Advanced Research | |
Laboratory: | Human Factors Laboratory | |
Project detail | ||
Project Description: | Conduct experiments across multiple high-fidelity driving simulators (with partners) and compare outcomes to existing field data and to each other. The goal is to then develop a set of mathematical transformations that will allow scientists and engineers to better predict the behavior of drivers in real environments based on the results of experiments conducted in driving simulators. | |
Goals: | Conduct experiments across multiple high-fidelity driving simulators (with partners) and compare outcomes to existing field data and to each other. The goal is then to develop a set of mathematical transformations that will allow scientists and engineers to better predict the behavior of drivers in real environments based on the results of experiments conducted in driving simulators. | |
Background Information: | The results of driver simulator research do not always agree with real-world experience, or with results from field studies. Indeed, behavioral results from two different driving simulators may produce different results. These latter differences may be because of the physical differences between the two simulators. For example, simulator A may have a motion base, whereas simulator B does not. Simulator B may have sophisticated graphics, whereas simulator A does not. Roadway engineers would be more inclined to use driving simulators if the findings of results could be transformed to take into account the characteristics of the driving simulator. Such transformation functions, if they can be derived, would more accurately predict real-world driving behavior from driving simulator behavior, and would make it possible to more readily integrate results from different driving simulators. | |
More Information URL(s): | ||
Product Type: | Research report | |
Test Methodology: | Driving simulation experiment | |
Expected Benefits: | The outcomes of this project will greatly benefit the driving safety research community as it will begin to quantify much needed information about how simulators and simulator characteristics relate to each other and to real-world driving data. | |
Deliverables: | Name: Making Driving Simulators More Useful for Behavioral Research Final Report Product Type(s): Research report Description: A preliminary set of mathematical transformations that will allow scientists and engineers to better estimate their simulator-based effects as applied to real roadway use. These transformations will be of two kinds: those that are generally applicable across a wide variety of simulators and those that represent correction factors that need to be applied for a particular type of simulator. | |
FHWA Topics: | Research/Technologies--FHWA Research and Technology | |
TRT Terms: | Driving Simulation Human Factors Safety Research Driving Simulators Highways |
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FHWA Disciplines: | Safety |
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Subject Areas: | Research Safety and Human Factors |
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