DocumentCode :
140600
Title :
The use of visual cues to determine the intent of cyclists in traffic
Author :
Hemeren, Paul E. ; Johannesson, Mikael ; Lebram, Mikael ; Eriksson, Fredrik ; Ekman, Kristoffer ; Veto, Peter
Author_Institution :
Interaction Lab., Univ. of Skovde, Skovde, Sweden
fYear :
2014
fDate :
3-6 March 2014
Firstpage :
47
Lastpage :
51
Abstract :
The purpose of this research was to answer the following central questions: 1) How accurate are human observers at predicting the behavior of cyclists as the cyclists approached a crossing? 2) If the accuracy is reliably better than chance, what cues were used to make the predictions? 3) At what distance from the crossing did the most critical cues occur? 4) Can the cues be used in a model that can reliably predict cyclist intent? We present results that show a number of indicators that can be used in to predict the intention of a cyclist, i.e., future actions of a cyclist, e.g., “left turn” or “continue forward” etc. Results of empirical studies show that humans are reasonably good at this type of prediction for a majority of the situations studied. However, some situations seem to contain conflicting information. The results also suggested that human prediction of intention is to a large extent relying on a single “strong” indicator, e.g., that the cyclist makes a clear “head movement”. Several “weaker” indicators that together could be a strong “combined indicator”, or equivalently strong evidence, is likely to be missed or too complex to be handled by humans in real-time. We suggest this line of research can be used to create decision support systems that predict the behavior of cyclists in traffic.
Keywords :
behavioural sciences computing; object detection; road traffic; traffic engineering computing; crossing; cyclist intention; cyclists behavior; decision support systems; head movement; traffic; visual cues; Acceleration; Bicycles; Conferences; Decision support systems;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Cognitive Methods in Situation Awareness and Decision Support (CogSIMA), 2014 IEEE International Inter-Disciplinary Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Antonio, TX
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-3563-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CogSIMA.2014.6816539
Filename :
6816539
Link To Document :
بازگشت