Effect of Vertical Alignment on Driver Perception of Horizontal Curves
Publication: Journal of Transportation Engineering
Volume 129, Issue 4
Abstract
The perception of the driver of the road features ahead is an important human factor that can considerably affect traffic safety and design consistency, and should be addressed in road design. An erroneous perception of the road can lead to actions that may compromise traffic safety. Previous studies have shown that combined horizontal and vertical alignments can cause a wrong perception of the horizontal curvature. In this paper, the hypothesis that the perception of the driver of the horizontal curvature is affected by the overlapping vertical alignment is examined analytically. Computer animation was selected as a three-dimensional presentation method of the road perspective, and was found to produce a realistic view of the road. A sample of drivers was interviewed to determine the radius of a horizontal curve on a level grade that would look equal to a radius of a horizontal curve overlapping with a vertical curve. The statistical analysis showed that the horizontal curvature looked consistently sharper when it overlapped with a crest curve and consistently flatter when it overlaps with a sag curve. Field measurements of operating speed profiles on a selected sample of combined alignments confirmed that, for the selected sample of alignments, driver behavior on horizontal curves depended on the overlapping vertical curve rather than the vertical grade of the approach tangent.
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Copyright © 2003 American Society of Civil Engineers.
History
Received: Jun 2, 2000
Accepted: Apr 22, 2002
Published online: Jun 13, 2003
Published in print: Jul 2003
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