4.7 Article

Estimating the travel demand impacts of semi automated vehicles

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PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.trd.2022.103311

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  1. University of California Institute of Transportation Studies from the State of California through the Senate Bill 1
  2. California Air Resources Board

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This study investigates the impact of level 2 automation on travel behavior among electric vehicle owners in California. The results show that those who engage in more long-distance travel due to automation tend to be younger, have lower household income, live in urban areas, own longer-range electric vehicles, use automation in various conditions, and have pro-technology attitudes and prefer outdoor lifestyles.
In this study we investigate changes in travel due to level 2 automation among owners of electric vehicles in California. Level 2 automation has the potential to reduce driver fatigue and make driving less stressful which could mean drivers choose to travel more. We use questionnaire survey data to investigate changes to long distance travel and annual vehicle miles travelled (VMT) due to automation. Results show those who report doing more long-distance travel because of automation are younger; have a lower household income; live in urban areas; own a longer-range electric vehicle; use automation in a variety of conditions; and have pro-technology attitudes and prefer outdoor lifestyles. We use propensity score matching to investigate whether automation leads to an increase in annual VMT. The results of this show 4059-4971 more miles per year among users of level 2 automation compared to owners of similar vehicles without automation.

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