Sonstige
Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
Sprache
- Englisch (74) (entfernen)
Volltext vorhanden
- nein (74) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Bewertung (20)
- Evaluation (assessment) (19)
- Safety (18)
- Sicherheit (18)
- Anfahrversuch (16)
- Conference (16)
- Konferenz (16)
- Prüfverfahren (16)
- Test method (16)
- Impact test (veh) (15)
- Injury (15)
- Verletzung (15)
- Accident (13)
- Dummy (13)
- Unfall (13)
- Anthropometric dummy (12)
- Fußgänger (12)
- Pedestrian (12)
- Simulation (11)
- Collision (10)
- Europa (10)
- Europe (10)
- Deutschland (9)
- Driver assistance system (9)
- Frontalzusammenstoß (9)
- Germany (9)
- Head on collision (9)
- Zusammenstoß (9)
- Analyse (math) (8)
- Analysis (math) (8)
- Biomechanics (8)
- Biomechanik (8)
- Fahrerassistenzsystem (8)
- Fahrzeug (7)
- Radfahrer (7)
- Schweregrad (Unfall (7)
- Verletzung) (7)
- injury) (7)
- Cyclist (6)
- Head (6)
- Kopf (6)
- Messung (6)
- Schweregrad (Unfall, Verletzung) (6)
- Severity (accid, injury) (6)
- Vehicle (6)
- Car (5)
- Child (5)
- Datenbank (5)
- Driver (5)
- Fahrer (5)
- Kind (5)
- Knee (human) (5)
- Measurement (5)
- Passive safety system (5)
- Passives Sicherheitssystem (5)
- Risikobewertung (5)
- Risk assessment (5)
- Severity (accid (5)
- Standardisierung (5)
- Standardization (5)
- Transport infrastructure (5)
- Tunnel (5)
- Accident prevention (4)
- Alte Leute (4)
- Autobahn (4)
- Brustkorb (4)
- Compatibility (4)
- Deformation (4)
- Fatality (4)
- Impact test (4)
- Improvement (4)
- Insasse (4)
- Knie (menschl) (4)
- Kompatibilität (4)
- Leg (human) (4)
- Motorway (4)
- Reproducibility (4)
- Reproduzierbarkeit (4)
- Research project (4)
- Seitlicher Zusammenstoß (4)
- Side impact (4)
- Test (4)
- Thorax (4)
- Tödlicher Unfall (4)
- Unfallverhütung (4)
- Vehicle occupant (4)
- Verbesserung (4)
- Verkehrsinfrastruktur (4)
- Versuch (4)
- Autonomes Fahren (3)
- Autonomous driving (3)
- Behaviour (3)
- Bein (menschl) (3)
- Bemessung (3)
- Benutzung (3)
- Braking (3)
- Bremsung (3)
- Deformable barrier (impact test) (3)
- Deformierbare Barriere (Anpralltest) (3)
- Design (overall design) (3)
- Fahrzeuginnenraum (3)
- Forschungsarbeit (3)
- Gefahrenabwehr (3)
- Gesetzgebung (3)
- Hospital (3)
- Interior (veh) (3)
- Krankenhaus (3)
- Legislation (3)
- Modification (3)
- Motorcyclist (3)
- Motorradfahrer (3)
- Old people (3)
- Pkw (3)
- Security (3)
- Statistics (3)
- Statistik (3)
- Use (3)
- Verformung (3)
- Verhalten (3)
- Veränderung (3)
- Abdomen (2)
- Active safety system (2)
- Air pollution (2)
- Airbag (2)
- Aktives Sicherheitssystem (2)
- Anti locking device (2)
- Attitude (psychol) (2)
- Aufprallschlitten (2)
- Automatic (2)
- Automatisch (2)
- Autonomes Fahrzeug (2)
- Autonomous vehicle (2)
- Belastung (2)
- Boden (2)
- Cervical vertebrae (2)
- Classification (2)
- Climate change (2)
- Cost benefit analysis (2)
- Crash Test (2)
- Data acquisition (2)
- Data bank (2)
- Database (2)
- Datenerfassung (2)
- Dauerhaftigkeit (2)
- Detection (2)
- Detektion (2)
- Development (2)
- Driver information (2)
- Driving (veh) (2)
- Durability (2)
- Einstellung (psychol) (2)
- Electric vehicle (2)
- Elektrofahrzeug (2)
- Entwicklung (2)
- Error (2)
- Fahrerinformation (2)
- Fahrstabilität (2)
- Fahrzeugführung (2)
- Fahrzeugsitz (2)
- Fehler (2)
- Fire (2)
- Front (2)
- Halswirbel (2)
- Highway design (2)
- Human body (2)
- Impact sled (2)
- Intelligent transport system (2)
- International (2)
- Klassifizierung (2)
- Klimawandel (2)
- Landstraße (2)
- Load (2)
- Luftverunreinigung (2)
- Mathematical model (2)
- Medical aspects (2)
- Medizinische Gesichtspunkte (2)
- Menschlicher Körper (2)
- Method (2)
- Motorcycle (2)
- Motorrad (2)
- Norm (tech) (2)
- On the spot accident investigation (2)
- Rechenmodell (2)
- Road network (2)
- Rural road (2)
- Safety belt (2)
- Seat (veh) (2)
- Severity (acid (2)
- Sicherheitsgurt (2)
- Soil (2)
- Specification (standard) (2)
- Spinal column (2)
- Straßenentwurf (2)
- Straßennetz (2)
- Straßenverkehrsrecht (2)
- Surfacing (2)
- Technologie (2)
- Technology (2)
- Traffic regulations (2)
- USA (2)
- Unterleib (2)
- Untersuchung am Unfallort (2)
- Vehicle handling (2)
- Wirbelsäule (2)
- Wirtschaftlichkeitsrechnung (2)
- (menschl) (1)
- Abfluss (1)
- Absorption (1)
- Accident rate (1)
- Active safety (1)
- Adult (1)
- Aged people (1)
- Air bag (restraint system) (1)
- Air quality management (1)
- Air transport (1)
- Aktive Sicherheit (1)
- Angle (1)
- Anthropmetric dummy (1)
- Antiblockiereinrichtung (1)
- Antiblockiersystem (1)
- Apparatus (measuring) (1)
- Arzneimittel (1)
- Asphaltstraße (Oberbau) (1)
- Auffahrunfall (1)
- Ausrüstung (1)
- Bau (1)
- Bearing capacity (1)
- Bein (1)
- Bicyclist (1)
- Brand (1)
- Bridge (1)
- Bridge management system (1)
- Brücke (1)
- Brücken Management System (1)
- Cadaver (1)
- Calibration (1)
- Camera (1)
- Carriageway (1)
- Cause (1)
- Chassis (1)
- Clay (1)
- Communication (1)
- Condition survey (1)
- Construction (1)
- Correlation (1)
- Crashtest (1)
- Critical path method (1)
- Damage (1)
- Data base (1)
- Data processing (1)
- Datenverarbeitung (1)
- Decision process (1)
- Decke (Straße) (1)
- Decke [Straße] (1)
- Deicing (1)
- Delivery vehicle (1)
- Demand (econ) (1)
- Demografie (1)
- Demography (1)
- Deterioration (1)
- Diagnostik (1)
- Diffusion (1)
- Digitale Bildverarbeitung (1)
- Dispersion (stat) (1)
- Driving aptitude (1)
- Droge (1)
- Drugs (1)
- Drunkenness (1)
- EU (1)
- Earthworks (1)
- Echtzeit (1)
- Education (1)
- Efficiency (1)
- Eichung (1)
- Electronic stability program (1)
- Elektronisches Stabilitätsprogramm (1)
- Emergency (1)
- Empfindlichkeit (1)
- Enteisung (1)
- Entscheidungsprozess (1)
- Environment (1)
- Environment protection (1)
- Equipment (1)
- Erdarbeiten (1)
- Erste Hilfe (1)
- Erwachsener (1)
- Erziehung (1)
- Evaluation (Assessment) (1)
- Expert system (1)
- Expertensystem (1)
- Fahrassistenzsystem (1)
- Fahrbahn (1)
- Fahrleistung (1)
- Fahrstreifen (1)
- Fahrtauglichkeit (1)
- Fahrwerk (1)
- Fein (mater) (1)
- Feinstaub (1)
- Fernverkehrsstrasse (1)
- Feuer (1)
- Fine (mater) (1)
- Finite element method (1)
- First aid (1)
- Flexible pavement (1)
- Flooding (1)
- Foot (not a measure) (1)
- Frau (1)
- Fugenfüllung (1)
- Fuß (1)
- Fußgängerbereich (1)
- Geomembran (1)
- Geomembrane (1)
- Geschwindigkeit (1)
- Gewicht (1)
- Greenhouse effect (1)
- Griffigkeit (1)
- Ground water (1)
- Grundwasser (1)
- Haftung (jur) (1)
- Head (human) (1)
- Heavy metal (1)
- Height (1)
- Höhe (1)
- Hüfte (menschl) (1)
- Image processing (1)
- Impact study (1)
- Incident detection (1)
- Incident management (1)
- Information (1)
- Intelligentes Transportsystem (1)
- Intelligentes Verkehrssystem (1)
- Interface (1)
- Intersection (1)
- Interview (1)
- Jahreszeit (1)
- Kamera (1)
- Kleintransporter (1)
- Knie (1)
- Knotenpunkt (1)
- Kommunikation (1)
- Kopf (menschl) (1)
- Korn (1)
- Kornverteilung (1)
- Korrelation(Math (1)
- Kraftfahrzeug (1)
- Layer (1)
- Learning (1)
- Lebenszyklus (1)
- Leichnam (1)
- Leistungsfähigkeit (allg) (1)
- Lernen (1)
- Level of service (1)
- Liability (1)
- Luftreinhaltung (1)
- Lufttransport (1)
- Main road (1)
- Market (1)
- Markt (1)
- Materialveraenderung (allg) (1)
- Medical examination (1)
- Medication (1)
- Medizinische Untersuchung (1)
- Merging (1)
- Messgerät (1)
- Mesurement (1)
- Methode der finiten Elemente (1)
- Motorisierungsgrad (1)
- Nachfrage (1)
- Network (traffic) (1)
- Netzplantechnik (1)
- Neural network (1)
- Neuronales Netz (1)
- Nitric acid (1)
- Non destructive testing (1)
- Notfall (1)
- Oberfläche (1)
- Overlapping (1)
- PVC (1)
- Particle (1)
- Particle size distribution (1)
- Particulate matter (1)
- Peat (1)
- Pedestrian precinct (1)
- Pelvis (1)
- Pfahl (1)
- Pile (1)
- Planning (1)
- Planung (1)
- Policy (1)
- Politik (1)
- Pollutant (1)
- Polyvinylchloride (1)
- Preloading (soil) (1)
- Prevention (1)
- Probability (1)
- Prototyp (1)
- Prototype (1)
- Prüefverfahren (1)
- Public transport (1)
- Rain (1)
- Real-time (1)
- Rear end collision (1)
- Reconstruction (accid) (1)
- Regen (1)
- Regional planning (1)
- Regionalplanung (1)
- Richtlinien (1)
- Risiko (1)
- Risikoverhalten (1)
- Risk (1)
- Risk taking (1)
- Road (1)
- Road user (1)
- Robot (1)
- Roboter (1)
- Run off (1)
- Sachschaden (1)
- Safety fence (1)
- Salpetersäure (1)
- Schadstoff (1)
- Schicht (1)
- Schnittstelle (1)
- Schutz (1)
- Schutzeinrichtung (1)
- Schwermetall (1)
- Sealing compound (1)
- Season (1)
- Seite (1)
- Sensitivity (1)
- Sensor (1)
- Service life (1)
- Settlement (1)
- Setzung (1)
- Side (1)
- Skidding resistance (1)
- Social factors (1)
- Soziale Faktoren (1)
- Spain (1)
- Spanien (1)
- Specifications (1)
- Speed (1)
- Stadtplanung (1)
- Stand der Technik (Bericht) (1)
- Standardabweichung (1)
- Stat) (1)
- State of the art report (1)
- Straße (1)
- Stress (psychol) (1)
- Störfallentdeckung (1)
- Störfallmanagement (1)
- Subsoil (1)
- Surface (1)
- Technische Vorschriften (Kraftfahrzeug) (1)
- Test procedure (1)
- Ton (Gestein) (1)
- Torf (1)
- Town planning (1)
- Traffic (1)
- Traffic lane (1)
- Traffic restraint (1)
- Tragfähigkeit (1)
- Transport mode (1)
- Treibhauseffekt (1)
- Trunkenheit (1)
- Umwelt (1)
- Umweltschutz (1)
- Unfallhäufigkeit (1)
- Unfallrekonstruktion (1)
- United Kindom (1)
- Untergrund (1)
- Ursache (1)
- Vehicle mile (1)
- Vehicle ownership (1)
- Vehicle regulations (1)
- Vereinigtes Königreich (1)
- Verfahren (1)
- Verfahren ; Verkehrsinfrastruktur (1)
- Verhütung (1)
- Verkehr (1)
- Verkehrsbeschränkung (1)
- Verkehrsmittel (1)
- Verkehrsnetz (1)
- Verkehrsqualität (1)
- Verkehrsteilnehmer (1)
- Verkehrsverflechtung (1)
- Virtual reality (1)
- Virtuelle Realität (1)
- Vorbelastung (Boden) (1)
- Vorn (1)
- Vorne (1)
- Wahrscheinlichkeit (1)
- Weather (1)
- Weight (1)
- Windschutzscheibe (1)
- Windscreen (veh) (1)
- Winkel (1)
- Wirkungsanalyse (1)
- Witterung (1)
- Woman (1)
- Zerstörungsfreie Prüfung (1)
- Zusammenstoss (1)
- Zustandsbewertung (1)
- Öffentlicher Verkehr (1)
- Überdeckung (1)
- Überschwemmung (1)
Motorcycling is a fascinating kind of transportation. While the riders' direct exposure to the environment and the unique driving dynamics are essential to this fascination, they both cause a risk potential which is several times higher than when driving a car. This chapter gives a detailed introduction to the fundamentals of motorcycle dynamics and shows how its peculiarities and limitations place high demands on the layout of dynamics control systems, especially when cornering. The basic principles of dynamic stabilization and directional control are addressed along with four characteristic modes of instability (capsize, wobble, weave, and kickback). Special attention is given to the challenges of braking (brake force distribution, dynamic over-braking, kinematic instability, and brake steer torque induced righting behavior). It is explained how these challenges are addressed by state-of-the-art brake, traction, and suspension control systems in terms of system layout and principles of function. It is illustrated how the integration of additional sensors " essentially roll angle assessment " enhances the cornering performance in all three categories, fostering a trend to higher system integration levels. An outlook on potential future control systems shows exemplarily how the undesired righting behavior when braking in curves can be controlled, e.g., by means of a so-called brake steer torque avoidance mechanism (BSTAM), forming the basis for predictive brake assist (PBA) or even autonomous emergency braking (AEB). Finally, the very limited potential of brake and chassis control to stabilize yaw and roll motion during unbraked cornering accidents is regarded, closing with a promising glance at roll stabilization through a pair of gimbaled gyroscopes.
The United Nations Economic Commission for Europe Informal Group on GTR No. 7 Phase 2 are working to define a build level for the BioRID II rear impact (whiplash) crash test dummy that ensures repeatable and reproducible performance in a test procedure that has been proposed for future legislation. This includes the specification of dummy hardware, as well as the development of comprehensive certification procedures for the dummy. This study evaluated whether the dummy build level and certification procedures deliver the desired level of repeatability and reproducibility. A custom-designed laboratory seat was made using the seat base, back, and head restraint from a production car seat to ensure a representative interface with the dummy. The seat back was reinforced for use in multiple tests and the recliner mechanism was replaced by an external spring-damper mechanism. A total of 65 tests were performed with 6 BioRID IIg dummies using the draft GTR No.7 sled pulse and seating procedure. All dummies were subject to the build, maintenance, and certification procedures defined by the Informal Group. The test condition was highly repeatable, with a very repeatable pulse, a well-controlled seat back response, and minimal observed degradation of seat foams. The results showed qualitatively reasonable repeatability and reproducibility for the upper torso and head accelerations, as well as for T1 Fx and upper neck Fx. However, reproducibility was not acceptable for T1 and upper neck Fz or for T1 and upper neck My. The Informal Group has not selected injury or seat assessment criteria for use with BioRID II, so it is not known whether these channels would be used in the regulation. However, the ramping-up behavior of the dummy showed poor reproducibility, which would be expected to affect the reproducibility of dummy measurements in general. Pelvis and spine characteristics were found to significantly influence the dummy measurements for which poor reproducibility was observed. It was also observed that the primary neck response in these tests was flexion, not extension. This correlates well with recent findings from Japan and the United States showing a correlation between neck flexion and injury in accident replication simulations and postmortem human subjects (PMHS) studies, respectively. The present certification tests may not adequately control front cervical spine bumper characteristics, which are important for neck flexion response. The certification sled test also does not include the pelvis and so cannot be used to control pelvis response and does not substantially load the lumbar bumpers and so does not control these parts of the dummy. The stiffness of all spine bumpers and of the pelvis flesh should be much more tightly controlled. It is recommended that a method for certifying the front cervical bumpers should be developed. Recommendations are also made for tighter tolerance on the input parameters for the existing certification tests.
This thesis gives a detailed picture of how planners, politicians, residents and transport engineers in three societies, Britain, Germany and the United States reacted to one of the most powerful inventions of the late nineteenth century, the motor car. Misjudgments of the potential growth of motor vehicle ownership and its adverse effects had serious repercussions in the coming decades, primarily in the dense urban areas. Disturbing has been the underestimation of the importance of public transport as a real alternative to the motor car in urban areas, first by the United States and even several decades later by Britain. Of the three countries, only Germany seems to have struck a better balance. Not surprisingly, already at the beginning of the twentieth century, conflicts occurred between the weaker road participants (pedestrians and cyclists), the existing urban fabric and the motor vehicle. A more comprehensive comparison between Britain and Germany shows that both countries developed specific patterns and had different attitudes towards road transport. Far more has been invested and planned in Germany whereas Britain has shown not so much a lack of foresight in planning but 'in investment in road transport. This major difference has had very visible effects an today's urban structure and transport situation. The demand for restraint of motor traffic had different motives in the two countries, and is not such a new idea as is often assumed. While in Germany even in the 1920s and 30s the protection of historic inheritance was a decisive motive, in Britain that was not the case. Questions of traffic restraint were however raised in connection with road safety and later in the 60s as a means of improving the urban environment. The turning point of nearly unlimited promotion of car use in urban areas took place in Germany during the 60s and 70s, whereas the Buchanan Report had already warned in the early 60s against the adverse effects cars could have in urban areas if they were not controlled. Although even in Britain the report was misunderstood and largely not put into practice, the wave of protest against road building occurred earlier there than in Germany. As a whole, Britain has shown a brillance of ideas in restraining motor vehicles which was lacking in the Federal Republic. At the beginning of the 70s, discussions started seriously in Germany an traffic calming concepts which were slowly transformed into reality, Britain seems to have followed these examples, but with a considerable time lag.
The first version of German Highway Capacity Manual was published in 2001. Now, a new version is published in 2015 (HBS 2015). For the new German Highway Capacity Manual, most major chapters are revised and some of them are totally rewritten. The chapter for merge, diverge, and small weaving segments is rewritten in accordance with forthcoming developments in the past 10 years. In this paper, an overview of the chapter in the new German Highway Capacity Manual is presented. Procedures dealing with performance analyses and level of service (LOS) of those segments are introduced both for freeways and rural highways. Differences between the former version and the new version of the chapter in the German Highway Capacity Manual are indicated and discussed. In most of the existing highway capacity manuals, LOS of merge, diverge, and small weaving segments is traditionally defined by speed, volume, or density in critical areas. In that traditional concept several capacity values of different critical areas (merge, diverge, and weaving) as well as upstream and downstream basic segments within the influence areas are evaluated separately. In the new HBS 2015, a new model which considers the total merge, diverge, and weaving segment as an entire object is incorporated. A combined volume-to-capacity ratio (freeways) or a combined density (rural highways) is used for defining the LOS of the total segment. The parameters of the new procedure are functions of the number of lanes of the major road, the number of lanes in the on-ramp or off-ramp, and the predefined geometric design of those segments. The coefficients are calibrated with field data or defined by experts" experiences within a matrix of coefficients. With those procedures, the traffic quality (LOS) can be obtained directly as a function of the volumes or densities on the major road and on the on-ramp or off-ramp respectively. The new procedure has the following advantages: a) a uniform function for all types of merge, diverge, and small weaving segments, b) traffic quality assessment for all critical areas under investigation in one step, and c) the procedure can easily be calibrated. For applications in practice, a set of graphs is provided.
Automated driving will provide many kinds of benefits - some direct and some indirect. The benefits originate at the individual level, from changes in the behaviour of drivers and travellers with regard to driving and mobility, ending up with benefits at the social level via changes in the whole transport system and society, where many of the current planning and operations paradigms are likely to be transformed by automated driving. There may also be disbenefits, particularly at a social level, for example in intensity of travel which could result in additional congestion and increased use of natural resources. There may also be unintended consequences. For example, we do not know the impacts on public transport: driverless vehicles could provide a means to a lower cost service provision, but the availability of automated cars could lead to more car travel at the expense of collective transport.
Established in 1997, the European New Car Assessment Programme (Euro NCAP) provides consumers with a safety performance assessment for the majority of the most popular cars in Europe. Thanks to its rigorous crash tests, Euro NCAP has rapidly become an important driver safety improvement to new cars. After ten years of rating vehicles, Euro NCAP felt that a change was necessary to stay in tune with rapidly emerging driver assistance and crash avoidance systems and to respond to shifting priorities in road safety. A new overall rating system was introduced that combines the most important aspects of vehicle safety under a single star rating. The overall rating system has allowed Euro NCAP to continue to push for better fitment and higher performance for vehicles sold on the European market. In the coming years, the safety rating is expected to play an important role in the support of the roll-out of highly automated vehicles.
Side-impact safety of passenger cars is assessed in Europe in a full-scale test using a moving barrier. The front of this barrier is deformable and represents the stiffness of an 'average' car. The EU Directive 96/27/EC on side impact protection has adopted the EEVC Side Impact Test Procedure, including the original performance specification for the barrier face when impacting a flat dynamometric rigid wall. The requirements of the deformable barrier face, as laid down in the Directive, are related to geometrical characteristics, deformation characteristics and energy dissipation figures. Due to these limited requirements, many variations are possible in designing a deformable barrier face. As a result, several barrier face designs are in the market. However, research institutes and car manufacturers report significant difference in test results when using these different devices. It appears that the present approval test is not able to distinguish between the different designs that may perform differently when they impact real vehicles. Therefore, EEVC Working Group 13 has developed a number of tests to evaluate the different designs. In these tests the barrier faces are loaded and deformed in a specific and/or more representative way. Barrier faces of different design have been evaluated. In the paper the set-up and the reasoning behind the tests is presented. Results showing specific differences in performance are demonstrated.
The term test procedure refers to a method that describes how a system has to be tested to identify and assess specific behavior or properties by experiments. This also includes the specification of required tools, equipment, boundary conditions, and evaluation methods. Test procedures are an essential tool to check whether desired product properties are present, which of course also applies to the development of driver assistance systems. In addition to development and release testing that mainly is performed by the vehicle or system manufacturer, there are tests with the purpose of an independent product testing that are conducted by external test organizations. These tests are needed for vehicle type approval (for admission to a specific market), in the context of applying the standard for functional safety (in both cases mainly executed by technical services (being accredited as certification laboratory)) or for customer information purposes (by a test institute for consumer protection). The focus of this chapter is these "external" test methods. After a taxonomy of test procedures, the differences between legislation (type approval) and consumer testing are highlighted. Typical tests and the associated test setup, tools, and assessment criteria are discussed, and an outlook toward testing in the near and mid-future is given.
Fire incidents are among the most relevant for people in a tunnel. Therefore, it is important to be sufficiently prepared for such events. A large scale fire test is to be used to help evaluate the initial burning duration and the time it takes for the fire to spread to other vehicles in the tunnel, and in particular how long it takes for a truck carrying wooden pallets to catch fire, taking into consideration the extremely high temperatures. The goal, therefore, is to determine the time it takes for a fire to spread to other vehicles in the tunnel. In the large scale fire test, an accident in a tunnel with one-way traffic is simulated between a truck loaded with approximately 3.7 t of wooden Europol pallets and a passenger car. Directly behind each of the vehicles involved in the accident there is another car which stops at a distance of 1.0 m. Approximately 300 litres of burning diesel are discharged from the truck's fuel tank, which is simulated by using approximately 400 litres of isopropanol. A 10 m-² burning pool forms underneath the truck. Other objectives of the large scale fire test are the validation of the CFD models and the evaluation of the progression of the thermal release ratios estimated for the simulation. The thermal release ratios generated in the test are determined and evaluated using various models.
The Swedish National Road Administration (SNRA), the Japanese Automobile Research Institute (JARI) and the Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt) are co-operating in the International Harmonized Research Activities on Intelligent Transportation Systems (IHRA-ITS). Under this umbrella a joint study was conducted. The overall objective of this study was to contribute to the definition and validation of a "battery of tools" which enables a prediction and an assessment of changes in driver workload due to the use of in-vehicle information systems (IVIS) while driving. In this sense \"validation\" means to produce empirical evidence from which it can be concluded that these methods reliably discriminate between IVIS which differ in terms of relevant features of the HMI-design. Additionally these methods should also be sensitive to the task demands imposed on the driver by the traffic situation and their interactions with HMI-design. To achieve these goals experimental validation studies (on-road and in the simulator) were performed in Sweden, Germany and Japan. As a common element these studies focused on the secondary task methodology as an approach to the study of driver workload. In a joint German-Swedish on-road study the Peripheral Detection Task (PDT) was assessed with respect to its sensitivity to the complexity of traffic situations and effects of different types of navigation systems. Results show that the PDT performance of both the German and the Swedish subjects reflects the task demands of the traffic situations better than those of the IVIS. However, alternative explanations are possible which will be examined by further analyses. Results of this study are supplemented by the Japanese study where informational demands induced by various traffic situations were analysed by using a simple arithmetic task as a secondary task. Results of this study show that relatively large task demands can be expected even from simple traffic situations.