TY - JOUR PY - 2020// TI - Autonomous vehicles: who will use them, and will they share? JO - Transportation planning and technology A1 - Clayton, William A1 - Paddeu, Daniela A1 - Parkhurst, Graham A1 - Parkin, John SP - 343 EP - 364 VL - 43 IS - 4 N2 - The advent of road transport automation is suggested to be one of four key technological transitions that could amount to a major transformation in mobility practices. Specifically, fully Automated Vehicles (AVs) might replace the current private car owner user model with fleets of on-demand synchronously-shared automated taxis. However, significant barriers to this vision becoming the norm remain. This paper examines two critical user-acceptance aspects of the transition: willingness to adopt AVs, and willingness to share an AV with others, particularly strangers. Our novel survey (n = 899) included a choice experiment featuring four future full automation transport services (private, synchronously/asynchronously shared, and public). Cluster analysis examined respondents' preferences and their demographic and psycho-social characteristics. We uncover significant uncertainty about willingness to adopt automation and sharing, and important differences between clusters within our sample. For example, under 50% of participants report willingness to use an AV over their normal mode, or would prefer an automated option to a current human-driven option. Our findings raise critical questions for policymakers and transport authorities. Not least, how can AV technologies help realise the environmental and social benefits of widespread vehicle sharing in a context of a travelling public that still prefers its privacy on-the-move?

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0308-1060 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03081060.2020.1747200 ID - ref1 ER -