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Impact of age and cognitive demand on lane choice and changing under actual highway conditions
Authors:Bryan Reimer  Birsen Donmez  Martin Lavallière  Bruce Mehler  Joseph F Coughlin  Normand Teasdale
Affiliation:1. MIT AgeLab & New England University Transportation Center, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, E40-279 Cambridge, MA 02139, USA;2. Université Laval, Faculté de Médecine, & Vieillissement, Centre de recherche FRSQ du Centre hospitalier affilié universitaire de Québec, 2300, rue de la Terrasse, Québec, Québec, Canada;3. University of Toronto, Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, 5 King''s College Road, Toronto, ON M5S 3G8, Canada
Abstract:Previous research suggests that drivers change lanes less frequently during periods of heightened cognitive load. However, lane changing behavior of different age groups under varying levels of cognitive demand is not well understood. The majority of studies which have evaluated lane changing behavior under cognitive workload have been conducted in driving simulators. Consequently, it is unclear if the patterns observed in these simulation studies carry over to actual driving. This paper evaluates data from an on-road study to determine the effects of age and cognitive demand on lane choice and lane changing behavior. Three age groups (20–29, 40–49, and 60–69) were monitored in an instrumented vehicle. The 40's age group had 147% higher odds of exhibiting a lane change than the 60's group. In addition, drivers in their 60's were less likely to drive on the leftmost lane compared to drivers in their 20's and 40's. These results could be interpreted as evidence that older adults adopt a more conservative driving style as reflected in being less likely to choose the leftmost lane than the younger groups and less likely to change lanes than drivers in their 40's. Regardless of demand level, cognitive workload reduced the frequency of lane changes for all age groups. This suggests that in general drivers of all ages attempt to regulate their behavior in a risk reducing direction when under added cognitive demand. The extent to which such self-regulation fully compensates for the impact of added cognitive demand remains an open question.
Keywords:Lane change behavior  Lane choice  Distraction  Cognitive workload  Passing  Aging
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