Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/48075
Title: Behavioural Response to Advanced Driver Assistance System (ADAS): A Naturalistic Data Comparison Between Vietnam and Belgium
Authors: KHATTAK, Wisal 
BRIJS, Kris 
TRAN, Thi 
VU, Anh Tuan 
BRIJS, Tom 
Issue Date: 2025
Publisher: 
Source: Transportation Research Procedia, 91 , p. 441 -448
Abstract: Road safety progress has stalled in many high-income countries, prompting interest in the use of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) as a potential solution. However, limited evidence exists on real-world, long-term and crosscountry impacts of ADAS. This study addresses these gaps through a naturalistic field trial in Belgium and Vietnam, focusing on driver behaviour across three driving-task specific domains: road sharing, speed management, and vehicle control. Eighteen Belgian drivers and fourteen Vietnamese drivers participated in a three-stage field driving experiment: baseline (no ADAS for three weeks), treatment (ADAS active for six weeks), and post-treatment (ADAS deactivated for three weeks). Risky driving behaviour events were collected, normalised per 100km and analysed separately for the two countries using a within-subject design. The findings suggest that the activation of ADAS results in safer driving behaviours, although the outcomes varied between countries and types of behaviour. Once ADAS was deactivated, many drivers reverted to their previous habits, lending support to the washout effect hypothesis. The study shows the importance of promoting the sustained use of ADAS and the need to tailor system designs to accommodate different cultural and traffic contexts. Abstract Road safety progress has stalled in many high-income countries, prompting interest in the use of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) as a potential solution. However, limited evidence exists on real-world, long-term and crosscountry impacts of ADAS. This study addresses these gaps through a naturalistic field trial in Belgium and Vietnam, focusing on driver behaviour across three driving-task specific domains: road sharing, speed management, and vehicle control. Eighteen Belgian drivers and fourteen Vietnamese drivers participated in a three-stage field driving experiment: baseline (no ADAS for three weeks), treatment (ADAS active for six weeks), and post-treatment (ADAS deactivated for three weeks). Risky driving behaviour events were collected, normalised per 100km and analysed separately for the two countries using a within-subject design. The findings suggest that the activation of ADAS results in safer driving behaviours, although the outcomes varied between countries and types of behaviour. Once ADAS was deactivated, many drivers reverted to their previous habits, lending support to the washout effect hypothesis. The study shows the importance of promoting the sustained use of ADAS and the need to tailor system designs to accommodate different cultural and traffic contexts.
Keywords: Advanced driver assistance system;Naturalistic field trial;Risky behaviour;Vehicle control;Road sharing;Speed management Keywords: Advanced driver assistance system
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/48075
ISSN: 2352-1457
DOI: 10.1016/j.trpro.2025.10.057
Category: A1
Type: Journal Contribution
Appears in Collections:Research publications

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