'Triangle of light' - latest conspicuity research

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Postby Horse » Tue May 20, 2014 1:13 pm


http://www.trl.co.uk/online_store/repor ... cycles.htm

The effect of two novel lighting configurations on the conspicuity of motorcycles

Motorcyclists have been shown consistently to be at a high risk of being involved in road collisions (Wulf, Hancock & Rahimi, 1989; Chesham, Rutter & Quine, 1991; Horswill & Helman, 2003), and often such collisions involve another vehicle violating the path of a motorcycle at a junction or intersection. It is known that two key factors contributing to such collisions are the relatively low conspicuity of motorcyclists, and the relative difficulty that other road users have in judging the time it will take a motorcycle to reach their position (time to collision or TTC) (e.g. Wulf et al., 1989; Horswill, Helman, Ardiles, & Wann, 2005).

Here we report findings from a roadside observation study in which participants were invited to observe a section of road (60kph limit) in Albany, Auckland, New Zealand, while a trial motorcycle was ridden past their position (average approach speed 55.7kph) displaying either a single headlight, a ‘V’ lighting configuration with the headlight and LED lighting on the raised mirrors of the motorcycle, or a ‘Y’ configuration which added LED lighting on the front forks.

At night, the motorcycle was detected approximately three-quarters of a second earlier with the ‘V’ lighting and approximately one and a quarter seconds earlier with the ‘Y’ lighting than with the headlight alone, but only when the participants were instructed to search the scene for motorcycles (as opposed to reporting the things in the scene that grabbed their attention).

At night the ‘V’ and ‘Y’ lighting also led participants to report longer ‘smallest acceptable gaps’ (by approximately half a second and three quarters of a second respectively) in front of the oncoming motorcycle than they did in the ‘headlight only’ condition. Daytime detection was much earlier than night time detection, and detection was much earlier when participants were asked specifically to search for motorcycles.

Author S Helman, M Palmer, C Haines, C Reeves
Pages 49
Date 11/02/2014
Reference PPR682
ISBN 978-1-908855-89-3
ISSN 0968-4093

Background:
http://msac.org.nz/our-work/visibility-project/
Anything posted by 'Horse' may be (C) Malcolm Palmer. Please ask for permission before considering any copying or re-use outside of forum posting.
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Postby Ancient » Tue May 20, 2014 4:20 pm


How unusual are the 'V' and 'Y' configurations as lights?

I suspect this is simply a case of 'Despite being asked to look for X, participants [knowing they are participating in a 'trialk'] noticed unusual things earlier than things they are used to': This is hardly news and is part of why DRLs get vehicles noticed (but as DRLs spread, the individual benefit reduces).
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Postby Horse » Tue May 20, 2014 5:57 pm


Ancient wrote:How unusual are the 'V' and 'Y' configurations as lights?

I suspect this is simply a case of 'Despite being asked to look for X, participants [knowing they are participating in a 'trialk']


Have a read of the report :wink:

For starters, participants weren't told they were taking part in a motorcycle-related trial :) During the first (of three) sections, they were simply asked to talk about what they could see. It was only in sections 2 & 3 that they had to look specifically for bikes.

Ancient wrote: This is hardly news and is part of why DRLs get vehicles noticed (but as DRLs spread, the individual benefit reduces).


The study wasn't simply about 'being noticed' though, it was also looking at whether or not the lights influenced drivers' decisions on when to pull out of a junction.

Like I said . . . have a read.
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