Driving behaviour responses to a moose encounter, automatic speed camera, wildlife warning sign and radio message determined in a factorial simulator study.

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Swedish National Road and Transport Research Institute, SE-581 95 Linköping, Sweden; Department of Human Geography, Lund University, SE-223 62 Lund, Sweden. Electronic address:

Published: January 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • A driving simulator study examined how drivers reacted to moose encounters and various countermeasures like speed cameras, warning signs, and radio messages across different landscapes.
  • It aimed to find the most effective strategies for reducing vehicle speed to prevent animal-vehicle collisions and tested if combining these measures would enhance their effectiveness.
  • Results showed that wildlife warning signs and radio messages effectively lowered speeds, while speed cameras tended to increase them, and moose encounters significantly reduced speeds, suggesting that creative approaches like moose artwork could help improve driver caution.

Article Abstract

In a driving simulator study, driving behaviour responses (speed and deceleration) to encountering a moose, automatic speed camera, wildlife warning sign and radio message, with or without a wildlife fence and in dense forest or open landscape, were analysed. The study consisted of a factorial experiment that examined responses to factors singly and in combination over 9-km road stretches driven eight times by 25 participants (10 men, 15 women). The aims were to: determine the most effective animal-vehicle collision (AVC) countermeasures in reducing vehicle speed and test whether these are more effective in combination for reducing vehicle speed; identify the most effective countermeasures on encountering moose; and determine whether the driving responses to AVC countermeasures are affected by the presence of wildlife fences and landscape characteristics. The AVC countermeasures that proved most effective in reducing vehicle speed were a wildlife warning sign and radio message, while automatic speed cameras had a speed-increasing effect. There were no statistically significant interactions between different countermeasures and moose encounters. However, there was a tendency for a stronger speed-reducing effect from the radio message warning and from a combination of a radio message and wildlife warning sign in velocity profiles covering longer driving distances than the statistical tests. Encountering a moose during the drive had the overall strongest speed-reducing effect and gave the strongest deceleration, indicating that moose decoys or moose artwork might be useful as speed-reducing countermeasures. Furthermore, drivers reduced speed earlier on encountering a moose in open landscape and had lower velocity when driving past it. The presence of a wildlife fence on encountering the moose resulted in smaller deceleration.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aap.2015.11.004DOI Listing

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