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Older Drivers and Autonomous Vehicles

What happens when you can’t drive, but you still want to get around? Autonomous vehicles may be the answer.

Transportation is taken for granted by many from day-to-day. But what happens when something goes wrong?  As drivers age, they may experience physical or cognitive declines, which can challenge their ability to drive safely. Autonomous vehicle technology could offer older drivers safe and equitable transportation.

But will older drivers accept this new technology? This is why the University of Florida’s Institute for Mobility, Activity and Participation is collaborating with the University of Alabama at Birmingham and the City of Gainesville to study the perceptions, values, beliefs, and attitudes of drivers 65 years or older. This research explores how exposure to a driving simulator (in autonomous mode) or riding in an autonomous vehicle alters the perceptions of these older drivers.

Preliminary results indicate that exposure to the autonomous shuttle increases older drivers’ safety and trust, and exposure to the simulator increases their intention to use these automated technologies.

The results of this research can help identify opportunities for overcoming barriers to older drivers’ acceptance of autonomous vehicles. The potential for widely accepted autonomous transportation with older drivers invites the possibility that, as people age, they can maintain the independence that transportation offers while keeping themselves and those around them safe.