2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.trf.2015.10.012
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Do experiments in the virtual world effectively predict how pedestrians evaluate electric vehicle sounds in the real world?

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Cited by 14 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Some tones have been identified as annoying to respondents when employed as back-up alarms for electric vehicles, although this was not universal among those who took part in tests [68]. Attempting to produce a new sound similar to the noises made by a conventional vehicle could help alleviate this, along with education on other sounds made by electric vehicles, with participants' reactions to different electric vehicle sounds examined both in real-world and virtual environments [69]. Ensuring electric vehicles and their infrastructure remain as safe as conventional vehicles across all potential causes of harm is key to keeping the public perception of the vehicles positive, which would improve the probability of a consumer choosing an electric vehicle over a conventional one.…”
Section: Social Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some tones have been identified as annoying to respondents when employed as back-up alarms for electric vehicles, although this was not universal among those who took part in tests [68]. Attempting to produce a new sound similar to the noises made by a conventional vehicle could help alleviate this, along with education on other sounds made by electric vehicles, with participants' reactions to different electric vehicle sounds examined both in real-world and virtual environments [69]. Ensuring electric vehicles and their infrastructure remain as safe as conventional vehicles across all potential causes of harm is key to keeping the public perception of the vehicles positive, which would improve the probability of a consumer choosing an electric vehicle over a conventional one.…”
Section: Social Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the same study, distances were underestimated to a similar extent in both environments, supporting the idea that recent HMDs mitigate distance compression (Kelly et al, 2017). Sounds emitted by electric vehicles were detected later and considered less recognizable in VR, although pleasantness rankings were equal to a physical street (Singh et al, 2015).…”
Section: Pedestrian Behavior In Virtual and Nonvirtual Environmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Zhang et al [23] developed dynamic and mathematical models to study the torsional vibration characteristics of a hybrid powertrain, and identify the noise sources of the hybrid electric vehicle in various driving modes by noise and vibration experiments. Singh et al [24] developed a methodology to evaluate the sound of an electric vehicle in a virtual-world environment. Therein, experimental results have shown that the virtualworld methodology presented accurately predicts pedestrians' evaluation of detectability of electric vehicle (EV) sounds and the pleasantness of the vehicle brand in the corresponding real-world scenario.…”
Section: B Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%