TY - CONF AB - <p>This report outlines an off-road trial of the effectiveness of Safety Campaign Messages (such as “Watch Your Speed”) sometimes displayed on Variable Message Signs (VMS) throughout the U.K.’s motorway network. Eighty drivers took part in the driving simulator study. It primarily investigated the effectiveness of the individual messages and how their presence affected driver behaviour towards more critical Tactical Incident Messages (TIM), such as those that might warn of an impending hazard. Both the content and concentration of the Safety Campaign Messages were varied. The Safety Campaign Messages in themselves were not especially beneficial, in that drivers did not significantly modify their driving style purely on the advice of the messages. However, witnessing the odd VMS carrying such a message appeared to improve driver alertness to the context of the VMS and consequently response to a TIM became more timely under these conditions. Yet, if the frequency of Safety Campaign Messages was overly high, drivers became jaded with the VMS content and their ability to act appropriately to a TIM degraded.</p> AU - A Hamish Jamson DA - 2007/7// DO - 10.17077/drivingassessment.1277 IS - 2007 VL - 4 PB - University of Iowa PY - 2007 TI - The Effectiveness of Safety Campaign VMS Messages - A Driving Simulator Investigation T2 - Driving Assessment Conference UR - https://pubs.lib.uiowa.edu/driving/article/id/28244/ ER -