Title: INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS IN COMMERCIAL VEHICLES
1INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS IN COMMERCIAL VEHICLES
- Commercial vehicles
- Person transport
- Cabs, shuttles
- Emergency response
- Police, fire, ambulance, utility crews, tow
trucks - Movement of Goods
- Long haul, short haul, local delivery
2Major Human Factors Differences Compared to
Personal Vehicles
- Envelope of operation
- Vehicle dynamics
- Workspace environment
- Driver population
- Fitness for service
- Situational awareness
3Route Planning
- Over the road trucks, most restrictive
- Minimize distance, minimize time, route/equipment
compatibility, federal, state, and local
regulations - Parcel delivery
- Scheduled route, on-call route
- Police, Emergency vehicles, Fire
- Shortest time to respond at location
- Operational Problems
- Present map systems do not contain such data
4CVO In-Vehicle Signing Systems
- Intended to provide truck drivers with signing
information - Regulatory, warning, information
- Speed limits, one way, RRX, street names
- Recommended maximum speed, advisory speeds, curve
save speeds - Warnings when exceeding special truck speed
limits (night limit, weight based limits, down
slopes) - Warnings on restriction of equipment
- Use of jake brakes
- Road loading
5Dispatch-Driver Communication
- Truck without payload is unacceptable
- Present method
- Radios, cell phones, fax
- Driver distraction, lost communication
- ITS Requirements for a Communication System
- Message must be stored in vehicle
- Acknowledgement given to dispatcher that message
was - Received in truck
- Read by driver
- Human factors issues
- The usual
- Display issues
- Keyboard issues
6ITS Warning Systems in Commercial Vehicles
- Trucks are major contributors to crashes
- In 1991 combination unit trucks represented 27
of the heavy vehicle registrations but accounted
for 59 of all crashes involving trucks - Collision warning systems
- E.g. Vehicle On Board Radar (Eaton VORAD)
- Yellow light target detected
- Red light closing speed, headway unsafe
- Auditory signal Imminent collision
- Driver fitness for duty
- Fatigue, illness, other cause
- Warn about lowered state of alertness
- Physiological measures Heart rate, eye blinks
- Secondary task performance (used also in trains)
- Problem is that drivers do not understand the
issue well - Even if understanding the issue, drivers may
ignore warnings
7ITS Warning Systems in Commercial Vehicles
- Rollover warning devices
- Mechanics of rollover
8ITS Warning Systems in Commercial Vehicles
- Rollover warning devices
- Mechanics of rollover
- Human perception of curvature
- Activation
- Intelligent highway sensors
- Vehicle borne sensors and roadway database
- Vehicle and roadway with transponders
- Method of intervention
- Warning display
- Active intervention (similar to ABS)
- Response may need to be automated into the system
- Little feedback of forces on trailer communicated
to driver
9Human Factors of Crashes in Curves
- Communication of curvature to driver
- Must be based on human factors principles
- Must be uniform across large region
10Human Factors of Crashes in Curves
- Perception of Curve Sharpness
- Experiment conducted by Zwahlen and Schnell
11Human Factors of Crashes in Curves
- Perception of Curve Sharpness
- Experiment conducted by Zwahlen and Schnell
105 of standard radius
95 of standard radius
12Human Factors of Crashes in Curves
- Perception of Curve Sharpness
- At least four devices in driver functional visual
field - Spread out to indicate curvature
- Advance warning sign
- Turn sign if safe speed is lt 30 MPH
- Curve sign if safe speed is gt 30 MPH
- Use Large arrow when turn sign used
13Physical and Cognitive Characteristics of CVO
Drivers
- Homogenous population
- CDL requirements are higher than normal driver
license requirements - No teens, no elderly, generally working adult age
range - More compliant with rules and regulations
- Alcohol, drugs less likely
- More stringent physical exams required
- Represents subset of normal driver population
- No need to specialize ITS design issues on
limited population