Browsing by Author "Kelarestaghi, Kaveh Bakhsh"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- Choice of speed under compromised Dynamic Message SignsKelarestaghi, Kaveh Bakhsh; Ermagun, Alireza; Heaslip, Kevin Patrick; Rose, John (PLOS, 2020-12-11)This study explores speed choice behavior of travelers under realistic and fabricated Dynamic Message Signs (DMS) content. Using web-based survey information of 4,302 participants collected by Amazon Mechanical Turk in the United States, we develop a set of multivariate latent-based ordered probit models participants. Results show female, African-Americans, drivers with a disability, elderly, and drivers who trust DMS are likely to comply with the fabricated messages. Drivers who comply with traffic regulations, have a good driving record, and live in rural areas, as well as female drivers are likely to slow down under fabricated messages. We highlight that calling or texting, taking picture, and tuning the radio are distracting activities leading drivers to slow down or stop under fictitious scenarios.
- The Impact of Potentially Realistic Fabricated Road Sign Messages on Route ChangeErmagun, Alireza; Kelarestaghi, Kaveh Bakhsh; Heaslip, Kevin (IEEE, 2022-02-02)This article studies self-reported route change behavior of 4,706 licensed drivers in the continental U.S. through a stated preference survey when they encounter road sign messages. Respondents are asked to score their likelihood of route change and speed change on a 5-point Likert scale to three messages: (1) "Heavy Traffic Due to Accident," (2) "Road Closure Due to Police Activity," and (3) "Storm Watch, Flooding in Area Soon." We fulfill three objectives. First, we identify the relationship between the route change behavior and socioeconomic and attitudinal-related factors. Second, we explore the impact of road sign messages with different contents on route change behavior. Third, we test the association between route change and speed change behaviors. The results demonstrate that: (1) the response of participants to compromised dynamic message signs varies according to the socioeconomic standing and attitude of participants, (2) the response of participants varies under different messages, and socioeconomic and attitudinal factors impact this differentiation, and (3) the likelihood of route change is positively associated with slowing down. This means, in practice, a malicious adversary has the potential to shunt and disturb traffic by disseminating fabricated messages and engineering route choice of drivers.