2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.trb.2015.03.011
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From behavioral psychology to acceleration modeling: Calibration, validation, and exploration of drivers’ cognitive and safety parameters in a risk-taking environment

Abstract: The first contribution of this research is capturing driver behavior in congested and incident-prone situations, thus incorporating drivers' risk-taking attitude in the model equations. The model formulated in this paper does not exogenously impose safety constraints to prevent accidents from occurring. Models used in practice typically preclude accidents, contrary to real-life situations. One more implication of this contribution is capturing that drivers do not perfectly register existing stimuli without sub… Show more

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Cited by 84 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…Other attempts describe more sophisticated human-factor mechanisms. For example, Hamdar and coauthors [77] propose a car-following model based on prospect theory in which drivers increase travel time to prevent the risk of rear-end collisions, and several authors have experimented with Fullers' Task-Capacity-Interface model [78][79][80]. Incorporating human factors in car-following models remains a very lively research field.…”
Section: Discussion: Modelling and Simulating Automated Vehiclesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other attempts describe more sophisticated human-factor mechanisms. For example, Hamdar and coauthors [77] propose a car-following model based on prospect theory in which drivers increase travel time to prevent the risk of rear-end collisions, and several authors have experimented with Fullers' Task-Capacity-Interface model [78][79][80]. Incorporating human factors in car-following models remains a very lively research field.…”
Section: Discussion: Modelling and Simulating Automated Vehiclesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…environment, experience, culture, psychology, etc. Stochastic effects and noises are the main emphases of many pedestrian or road traffic modelling approaches (see, e.g., white noises [31,17], pink-noise [32], action-point [33], or again inaccuracies or risk-taking behaviour [34,35]).…”
Section: Stochastic First Order Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…experience, culture, environment, psychology, etc. Stochastic effects and notion of noise are the main emphasis of many pedestrian or road traffic modelling approaches (see, e.g., white noises [13,30], pink-noise [29], action-point [36], or again inaccuracies or risk-taking behavior [33,10]). Fig.…”
Section: Definition Of the Stochastic Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%