2019
DOI: 10.1177/0018720819853993
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Transporting Children in Autonomous Vehicles: An Exploratory Study

Abstract: Objective Identify factors that impact parents’ decisions about allowing an unaccompanied child to ride in an autonomous vehicle (AV). Background AVs are being tested in several U.S. cities and on highways in multiple states. Meanwhile, suburban parents are using ridesharing services to shuttle children from school to extracurricular activities. Parents may soon be able to hire AVs to transport children. Method Nineteen parents of 8- to 16-year-old children, and some of their children, rode in a driving simula… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(36 citation statements)
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References 15 publications
(23 reference statements)
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“…Potential car features were derived from the potential concerns (Section 2.2.5), literature on car features in the context of ride sharing, users with disabilities, and smart systems [20,[37][38][39], and brainstorming sessions with parents from a prior qualitative study and analysis [40]. Four categories of car features about route control, assurance, child safety, and comfort included various aspects of the operation of AV, child restraint system, communication from/to the child/adult, access to the AV, support mechanism, and emergency situations.…”
Section: Importance Of Car Featuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Potential car features were derived from the potential concerns (Section 2.2.5), literature on car features in the context of ride sharing, users with disabilities, and smart systems [20,[37][38][39], and brainstorming sessions with parents from a prior qualitative study and analysis [40]. Four categories of car features about route control, assurance, child safety, and comfort included various aspects of the operation of AV, child restraint system, communication from/to the child/adult, access to the AV, support mechanism, and emergency situations.…”
Section: Importance Of Car Featuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mothers and parents with younger children had higher levels of concern and rated the benefits lower than their counterparts [19]. A 2019 study explored the minimum age for children riding in AVs alone, ridership scenarios, and vehicle features needed to support such uses [20]. Upon experiencing a short simulated autonomous ride, 63% of parents thought they would be willing to be alone or be with their child in an AV, but only 21% would let their child ride alone.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…It is women who make up two thirds of public transportation users [35]. In this context, we would like to point to [36], who conducted an exploratory user study on parents' decisions about allowing their child to ride in an AV unaccompanied. We hypothesize that children being able to drive without their parents could take a considerable amount of responsibility off women who are the ones that usually take their kids from A to B.…”
Section: Gendered Mobility Patternsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lastly, other papers seek to uncover or identify emerging human factors issues that will become more prominent as the technology progresses, along with public acceptance and uptake. Although the use of advanced technology by nondrivers is still a nascent application, Tremoulet et al (2020) use a focus group and simulation to identify some of the factors that stand to impact parents' decisions about allowing their children to ride in an automated vehicle. Targeting a very different use case, Motamedi et al (2020) develop a user acceptance model of shared-ownership of automated vehicle, contrasted with personally owned vehicles.…”
Section: Overview Of the Special Issuementioning
confidence: 99%