This paper presents the results of a driving simulator study conducted for the UK-funded HumanDrive project, which aims to develop natural, humanlike autonomous vehicle control. As part of that effort, this paper examines whether the established relationship between different sensation seeking (SS) traits and speed choice holds true across a range of driving scenarios, with different levels of contextual risk. Risk was introduced by varying a number of factors, including the environment (rural/urban), and the road edge context (low risk, static risk, potentially dynamic risk). Correlation analysis was performed between sensation seeking and the 95th percentile of vehicle speed for roads with different levels of risk, also considering age an...
The objective of this research, based on an extended version of the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB,...
The objective of this research, based on an extended version of the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB,...
The prime purpose of our study was to find out whether the need for stimulation has a systematic inf...
This paper presents the results of a driving simulator study conducted for the UK-funded HumanDrive ...
This paper presents the results of a driving simulator study conducted for the UK-funded HumanDrive ...
While the interest of the transport research community and automotive industry is increasingly turni...
In Wilde's risk homeostasis theory, it is assumed that people have a target risk which guides their ...
In Wilde's risk homeostasis theory, it is assumed that people have a target risk which guides their ...
In Wilde's risk homeostasis theory, it is assumed that people have a target risk which guides their ...
In Wilde's risk homeostasis theory, it is assumed that people have a target risk which guides their ...
In Wilde's risk homeostasis theory, it is assumed that people have a target risk which guides their ...
The prime purpose of our study was to find out whether the need for stimulation has a systematic inf...
The prime purpose of our study was to find out whether the need for stimulation has a systematic inf...
The prime purpose of our study was to find out whether the need for stimulation has a systematic inf...
The prime purpose of our study was to find out whether the need for stimulation has a systematic inf...
The objective of this research, based on an extended version of the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB,...
The objective of this research, based on an extended version of the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB,...
The prime purpose of our study was to find out whether the need for stimulation has a systematic inf...
This paper presents the results of a driving simulator study conducted for the UK-funded HumanDrive ...
This paper presents the results of a driving simulator study conducted for the UK-funded HumanDrive ...
While the interest of the transport research community and automotive industry is increasingly turni...
In Wilde's risk homeostasis theory, it is assumed that people have a target risk which guides their ...
In Wilde's risk homeostasis theory, it is assumed that people have a target risk which guides their ...
In Wilde's risk homeostasis theory, it is assumed that people have a target risk which guides their ...
In Wilde's risk homeostasis theory, it is assumed that people have a target risk which guides their ...
In Wilde's risk homeostasis theory, it is assumed that people have a target risk which guides their ...
The prime purpose of our study was to find out whether the need for stimulation has a systematic inf...
The prime purpose of our study was to find out whether the need for stimulation has a systematic inf...
The prime purpose of our study was to find out whether the need for stimulation has a systematic inf...
The prime purpose of our study was to find out whether the need for stimulation has a systematic inf...
The objective of this research, based on an extended version of the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB,...
The objective of this research, based on an extended version of the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB,...
The prime purpose of our study was to find out whether the need for stimulation has a systematic inf...