IF 4.1 2区 医学 Q2 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience Pub Date : 2025-02-19 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fnagi.2025.1496224
Felix Menze, Nathan W Churchill, Tom A Schweizer, Simon J Graham
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:机动车事故仍然是全球意外死亡的主要原因。没有驾驶经验的年轻驾驶员和老年驾驶员的死伤率都特别高。了解与成熟和衰老相关的行为变化,可为驾驶性能评估提供依据,并有助于制定识别高风险驾驶员的新措施。为了进一步揭示这种影响,本研究旨在利用一个大型模拟驾驶数据集来描述各年龄组之间和内部的模拟驾驶行为:所分析的数据集包括 112 名参与者(47/112,42% 为女性),年龄在 17 岁至 85 岁之间(平均 ± 标准差:54 ± 22 岁)。参与者在仿照加拿大安大略省标准驾照考试的场景中进行导航,其中包括在十字路口的一系列转弯,这些转弯具有不同的复杂程度(例如,涉及迎面而来的车辆或行人)和分心程度(要求对常识性问题做出听觉回答)。我们不仅针对每项任务的全部完成情况,还根据常见的子任务(如在十字路口刹车)对行为指标进行了定义和调查,然后对不同年龄组(青年、中年、老年)的行为指标进行了比较:总体而言,年轻成人与中年成人在基本任务中的表现相似,但在分心时的交通导航子任务中表现出差异,例如在接近交叉路口时开始减速的时间明显较晚。另一方面,老年驾驶员的平均车速较低,在交叉路口停车的时间较早,与行人的距离较远,但完成驾驶任务所需的时间明显较长:通过任务内量化产生的丰富细节,研究结果与之前的文献一致,并对之前的文献进行了补充,这些文献显示,与中年人相比,年轻人的驾驶行为表现暗示着更高的风险,而老年人的驾驶行为表现则暗示着驾驶能力下降带来的谨慎。特别是,任务内量化显示,分心(如延迟减速)对青壮年驾驶的影响更大,而老年人则优先考虑安全驾驶(如在交叉路口正确刹车),而不是对分心做出反应。这项研究可作为未来驾驶安全和事故预防研究的动力,并为评估政府法规提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Simulated driving behavior over the adult age span.

Background: Motor vehicle accidents remain a leading cause of accidental death worldwide. Death and injury rates are particularly high for both young inexperienced drivers and elderly drivers. Understanding the behavioral changes that are associated with maturation and aging could inform assessments of driving performance and lead to new measures identifying at-risk drivers. To shed further light on such effects, this study aims to characterize simulated driving behavior across and within age groups using a large driving simulation dataset.

Methods: The analyzed dataset consisted of 112 participants [47/112 (42%) female] between the ages of 17 and 85 (average ± standard deviation: 54 ± 22 years). Participants performed navigation in scenarios modeled after the standard licensing test of Ontario, Canada, which included a series of turns at intersections with different levels of complexity (e.g., involving oncoming traffic or pedestrians) and levels of distraction (requiring auditory responses to common-knowledge questions). Behavioral metrics were defined and investigated not only for the full completion of each task but also based on common subtasks (e.g., braking at an intersection), which were then compared across and within age groups (young, middle-aged, old).

Results: Overall, young adults behaved similarly to middle-aged adults for basic tasks but showed differences during traffic navigation subtasks when distracted, such as starting to decelerate significantly later when approaching intersections. Old drivers, on the other hand, drove at lower average speed, stopped earlier at intersections, and left increased distances to pedestrians, but required significantly more time to complete the driving tasks.

Conclusion: With rich detail arising from intra-task quantification, the results were consistent with and additive to previous literature showcasing that compared to middle-aged adults, young adults showed performance suggestive of riskier driving behavior, and old adults showed performance suggestive of caution consequent to declining driving ability. In particular, the intra-task quantification revealed that the driving of young adults was more impacted by the presence of distraction (e.g., delayed decelerating), whereas old adults prioritized safe driving (e.g., correctly braking at intersections) over responding to distractions. The study may be used as motivation for future studies of driving safety and accident prevention, and informed assessment of governmental regulations.

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来源期刊
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY-NEUROSCIENCES
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
8.30%
发文量
1426
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience is a leading journal in its field, publishing rigorously peer-reviewed research that advances our understanding of the mechanisms of Central Nervous System aging and age-related neural diseases. Specialty Chief Editor Thomas Wisniewski at the New York University School of Medicine is supported by an outstanding Editorial Board of international researchers. This multidisciplinary open-access journal is at the forefront of disseminating and communicating scientific knowledge and impactful discoveries to researchers, academics, clinicians and the public worldwide.
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