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Evaluating current and future pedestrian mid-block crossing safety treatments using virtual reality simulation.
Angulo, Austin Valentine; Robartes, Erin; Guo, Xiang; Donna Chen, T; Heydarian, Arsalan; Smith, Brian L.
Afiliación
  • Angulo AV; SUNY University of Buffalo Department of Civil, Structural, and Environmental Engineering, 204D Ketter Hall, Buffalo, NY 14228, United States. Electronic address: avangulo@buffalo.edu.
  • Robartes E; Virginia Department of Transportation, Virginia Transportation Research Council, 530 Edgemont Rd, Charlottesville, VA 22903, United States. Electronic address: Erin.Robartes@VDOT.Virginia.gov.
  • Guo X; University of Virginia Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, 151 Engineer's Way, Olsson Hall, Charlottesville, VA 22904, United States. Electronic address: xg3kb@virginia.edu.
  • Donna Chen T; University of Virginia Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, 151 Engineer's Way, Olsson Hall, Charlottesville, VA 22904, United States. Electronic address: tdchen@virginia.edu.
  • Heydarian A; University of Virginia Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, 151 Engineer's Way, Olsson Hall, Charlottesville, VA 22904, United States. Electronic address: ahx6rx@virginia.ed.
  • Smith BL; University of Virginia Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, 151 Engineer's Way, Olsson Hall, Charlottesville, VA 22904, United States. Electronic address: bls2z@virginia.edu.
Accid Anal Prev ; 206: 107715, 2024 Oct.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38996532
ABSTRACT
Virtual reality (VR) simulation offers a proactive, cost effective, immersive, and low risk platform for studying pedestrian safety. Within immersive virtual environments (IVEs), existing and alternative design conditions and intelligent transportation systems (ITS) technologies can be directly compared, prior to real-world implementation, to assess the impacts alternatives may have on pedestrian safety, perception, and behavior. Environmental factors can be controlled within IVEs so that test trials are replicable and directly comparable. Coupled with stated preference feedback, participants' observed preferences and behavior provide a comprehensive understanding of the impacts of proposed design alternatives. This research presents a case study of pedestrian behavior with three different mid-block crossing safety treatments modeled within a one-to-one scale IVE replication of a real-world location in Charlottesville, Virginia. The three safety treatments consider both passive and active collision avoidance designs and technologies, including (1) the existing painted crosswalk, (2) the addition of rectangular rapid flashing beacons (RRFBs), and (3) a pedestrian to everything (P2X) ITS phone application. Additionally, this paper demonstrates a VR simulation experimental design and framework for testing pedestrian safety treatments within naturalistic and replicable IVEs to assess both stated and observed preferences and behaviors of pedestrians. Repeated measures ANOVA indicated changes in both accepted gap size (p = 0.001) and crossing speed (p < 0.001) with alternative safety treatments. Generalized mixed models showed that pedestrians waited for statistically larger gap sizes (p = 0.02) without the assistance of alternative safety technologies (RRFBs and P2X application) and pedestrians crossed the street significantly faster (p = 0.001) without the alternative safety technologies, leading to unsafe dashing behavior. Through post-experiment surveys, it was found that participants perceived the As Built environment to be the least safe of the three treatments and that their sense of risk within the IVE was realistic. Considering both the observed crossing behavior and stated feedback, pedestrians exhibited intentionally unsafe darting behavior without assistive safety technology. This study demonstrates how VR simulation may be leveraged to study both stated preferences and observed behavior for understanding the safety implications of alternative roadway designs, providing a proactive approach for assessing and designing for pedestrian safety.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Seguridad / Accidentes de Tránsito / Planificación Ambiental / Peatones / Realidad Virtual Idioma: En Revista: Accid Anal Prev / Accid. anal. prev / Accident analysis and prevention Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Seguridad / Accidentes de Tránsito / Planificación Ambiental / Peatones / Realidad Virtual Idioma: En Revista: Accid Anal Prev / Accid. anal. prev / Accident analysis and prevention Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article