Author
Listed:
- Fangyan Zhang
(Shanxi Transport Safety & Emergency Technology Center (Co., Ltd.), Taiyuan 030032, China)
- Qiqi Liu
(College of Metropolitan Transportation, Beijing University of Technology, Beijing 100124, China)
- Jianling Huang
(Beijing Intelligent Transportation Development Center, Beijing 100073, China)
- Xiaohua Zhao
(College of Metropolitan Transportation, Beijing University of Technology, Beijing 100124, China)
- Wenhui Dong
(College of Metropolitan Transportation, Beijing University of Technology, Beijing 100124, China)
Abstract
As a novel traffic security facility to improve the environment of tunnels, the influence of tunnel sidewall decoration on drivers has been highly controversial. To analyze the impact of the multi-factor coupling of sidewall decoration effects on driving safety, eight combination schemes with different pattern elements and pattern spacings were designed to create a driving simulation environment. Twenty-seven drivers were recruited to obtain fine-grained driving behavior indicators via driving simulation experiments. The velocity following ratio, steering wheel angle, maximum deceleration, and accelerator power were selected to construct an index system. The visual information load of drivers was quantified by the landscape color quantified theory. Based on the analysis of the influence of the singular factor of the pattern element or pattern spacing on driving behavior, a coupling coordination degree model is introduced to quantify the relationship between the complexity of the pattern elements, the pattern spacing, and the coupling coordination degree, and a reasonable combination of their complexities is selected. The results show that the element complexity and pattern spacing of tunnel sidewall decoration have significant effects on driving behavior. Among the schemes considered in this study, the coupling effect of an element complexity of 562.1 and a pattern spacing of 5.5 m was found to be the optimal combination. The coupling coordination degree should be more than 0.8 as the threshold, and the model analysis results indicated that when the pattern spacing was fixed at about 10 m, the ideal element complexity was between 135.6–564.7. This study offers both theoretical and technical support for enhancing traffic safety through tunnel sidewall decoration. By defining optimal thresholds for information density and pattern spacing, it lays a solid foundation for the development of a standardized guideline on decoration content.
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