How do different micro-mobility vehicles affect longitudinal control? Results from a field experiment
Journal article, 2023

Introduction: While micromobility vehicles offer new transport opportunities and may decrease fuel emissions, the extent to which these benefits outweigh the safety costs is still uncertain. For instance, e-scooterists have been reported to experience a tenfold crash risk compared to ordinary cyclists. Today, we still do not know whether the real safety problem is the vehicle, the human, or the infrastructure. In other words, the new vehicles may not necessarily be unsafe; the behavior of their riders, in combination with an infrastructure that was not designed to accommodate micromobility, may be the real issue. Method: In this paper, we compared e-scooters and Segways with bicycles in field trials to determine whether these new vehicles create different constraints for longitudinal control (e.g., in braking avoidance maneuvers). Results: The results show that acceleration and deceleration performance changes across vehicles; specifically, e-scooters and Segways that we tested cannot brake as efficiently as bicycles. Further, bicycles are experienced as more stable, maneuverable, and safe than Segways and e-scooters. We also derived kinematic models for acceleration and braking that can be used to predict rider trajectories in active safety systems. Practical Applications: The results from this study suggest that, while new micromobility solutions may not be intrinsically unsafe, they may require some behavior and/or infrastructure adaptations to improve their safety. We also discuss how policy making, safety system design, and traffic education may use our results to support the safe integration of micromobility into the transport system.

Bicycle dynamics

E-scooters

Active safety

Cycling safety

Segways

Author

Marco Dozza

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Vehicle Safety

Tianyou Li

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Vehicle Safety

Lucas Billstein

Student at Chalmers

Christoffer Svernlöv

Student at Chalmers

Alexander Rasch

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Vehicle Safety

Journal of Safety Research

0022-4375 (ISSN)

Vol. 84 24-32

DICE - Driver interaction with cyclists and e-scooterists at intersections

Toyota Motor Europe, 2021-08-15 -- 2025-08-14.

Characterizing and classifying new e-vehicles for personal mobility

Swedish Transport Administration (2019/21327), 2019-08-01 -- 2020-09-01.

Subject Categories

Transport Systems and Logistics

Vehicle Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.jsr.2022.10.005

More information

Latest update

3/16/2023