In view of the increase in traffic volume and growing demands on traffic, alternative mobility concepts such as automation of the driving task are increasingly being investigated. In line with this course of development project KONVOI was initiated, where an interdisciplinary research team carried out the electronic coupling of trucks. Because the technical feasibility of such automated systems had already been proved, project KONVOI focused on quantifying the impact of automated systems on traffic and on the interaction between humans and machines. Technical development of the system took place with preferential consideration of the human being. The KONVOI system was analyzed for acceptance and the potential workload by using test people in a driving simulator. The test results had a direct effect on the technical development of the system. After approval of the prototype, the traffic effects of the KONVOI system were examined in the context of real German highways. The results of this impact analysis served as a comparison of the developmental concept and evaluation of the system. Open questions concerning the effects of the KONVOI system on car drivers were investigated through additional test drives in the driving simulator. In project KONVOI, an automated system was run in real traffic for the first time in Europe. This testing and the strong consideration of the human being in the development process have provided new insights into the development of driver assistant systems and automated driving systems.
This paper discusses road safety issues and the necessity for safety enhancements, especially on rural roads. Points of discontinuity in infrastructure consistently lead to serious accidents. The major causes of these accidents are inattentiveness and excessive speed. A possible measure to increase attention and reduce speed is installation of transversal rumble strips (TRS). The German government funded a research project to evaluate the use of these strips in the approaches to hazardous bends. The design of rumble strips was optimized on the basis of literature research and metrological preexaminations. The resulting design is expected to create a maximal impact on the driver. The effect of these optimized rumble strips on speed choice was tested by field studies. In the approaches to hazardous bends on rural roads, rumble strips were installed according to the design of the pretests. The impact on the drivers’ behavior, especially on speed choice, was investigated by before-and-after analyses with radar measurements and video surveying. In addition to statistical analyses of the effect on the driving speed, detailed investigations on the impact to special driver groups and car types were performed. According to the analysis made in this research project, TRS are cost-efficient and have a positive effect on driving behavior and hence on road safety.
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