Public discomfort at the prospect of autonomous vehicles: Building on previous surveys to measure attitudes in 11 countries

There have been many surveys of public responses to Autonomous Vehicles (AVs), both reported in peer-reviewed journals and in the mainstream media.People anchor their representations of novel technological objects within their existing experience. What elements of such experience anchor AVs? The authors review academic English language survey studies from 2015 to 2017 and surveys publicised in UK National newspapers which typically reveal discomfort about the prospect of AVs. Against this background the authors report the results of their own survey of 11,827 drivers across 11 European countries, addressing attitudes to driving alongside AVs as well as to riding in them. The authors establish a composite indicator of perceptions of AVs that combines responses on using AVs and sharing the road with them, and analyse its relationship with a set of covariate measures. Respondents’ technological optimism and uptake of driving technology was associated with more positive perceptions of AVs, and measures of respondents’ enjoyment of driving, and how ‘sociable’ they were towards fellow road users, was associated with more negative perceptions. The negative association between driving ‘sociability’ and enthusiasm for AVs was attenuated by levels of general technological optimism. The authors discuss the difficulties in researching public responses to novel technological objects and make suggestions for improvement in future survey research on AVs.

Language

  • English

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  • Accession Number: 01707573
  • Record Type: Publication
  • Files: TRIS
  • Created Date: Jun 5 2019 2:20PM