The 2015 
Moderator Alan Stevens, from UK transport consultancy 
     
The US DOT’s Marcia Pincus introduced its Applications for the Environment: Real-Time Information Synthesis (AERIS) programme, focussing on evaluation of Signal Phase and Timing (SPaT). This enables interaction between traffic signals and connected vehicles, helping to maximise efficiency when approaching signals. Its GlidePath project aims to optimise the environmental performance of vehicles nearing a signalised intersection and automation provided a 22% benefit.
 
Pirkko Rama from Finland’s VTT Technical Research Centre addressed future technical - and driver behaviour - impact analysis through a matrix of effects and vehicle automation levels as defined by the Society of American Engineers. She referenced behaviour studies evaluating how increasing automation could change factors such as route and speed choice, headways, lane keeping and interactions.
She highlighted key issues such as driver interaction during take-over   and take-back in level 3 implementation and the effect on traffic flow   impacts of assumed headways between vehicles. “Automated vehicles might   initially have increased ones [headways], but in future they may have   shorter ones”, she said. 
     
Reinhard  Pfliegl of  A3PS Austria speculated that level 5 automation will  initially arrive on  motorways, followed by rural roads, with urban ones  last. He  “definitely” expected safety benefits (in line with  automation trends)  and anticipated enhanced environmental  sustainability. 
     
As  to  efficiency gains, he said “the situation is complicated as both the   infrastructure and vehicle numbers are growing globally” while adding   that funding constraints have increased this focus. He ended with a   graphical simulation showing how self-organising cooperating vehicles   would completely redraw the fundamental traffic flow diagram.  
     
From   the Karlsruhe Institute for Technology, Germany, Tobias Strauss   stressed automation’s role in counteracting fatigue, distraction and   excessive demands on drivers. He also highlighted the challenges of   evaluating, for example, sensor limitations, component failures and   software complexity. “Will automation outperform humans?” he asked,   while Stevens went further asking, “how far will automation need to   outperform humans to gain public trust?”
     
Andrew   Somers, of Australian consultancy Transoptim, addressed strategic  policy  issues for governments looking towards 2050 and proposed  detailed  planning of alternative scenarios, to allow development of  appropriate  policy levers. 
 
    
 
    
        
        
        



