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Journal Article

Citation

Landry S, Jeon M, Lautala P, Nelson D. Transp. Res. F Traffic Psychol. Behav. 2019; 62: 228-245.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.trf.2018.12.024

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Train-vehicle collisions at highway-rail grade crossings (RR crossings) continue to be a major issue in the US and across the world. To prevent several decades of safety improvements from plateauing, experts are turning towards novel warning devices that can be applied to all crossings with minimal cost. One of the potential approaches is in-vehicle auditory alerts (IVAAs) which are implementable with today's technology and could potentially complement the existing warnings in a cost effective manner. Study 1 collected subjective data on a pool of potential in-vehicle auditory alerts from 31 participants. Study 2 recruited 20 participants to drive in a medium fidelity driving simulator with and without IVAAs for RR crossings.

RESULTS suggest IVAAs inform and remind drivers of how to comply at RR crossings, and have a lasting effect on driver behavior after the IVAA is no longer presented. Compliance scores were highest among combination RR crossing visual warnings, such as crossbucks featuring STOP or YIELD signs. Compliance was lowest for crossbucks alone and active gates in the off position. IVAAs had the largest impact on compliance scores at crossbucks and gates. The discussion includes implications for designing IVAA systems for RR crossings, the limitations of the study, and the participants' perception of the novel warning type.


Language: en

Keywords

Auditory displays; Grade crossing; In-vehicle auditory alerts; Traffic control device

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