The pedestrian is regarded to be one of the most vulnerable road users. Non-verbal communication between drivers and pedestrians seems to play an important role in the mitigation of collisions. The emergence of autonomous vehicles in traffic in the near future presses the need to
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The pedestrian is regarded to be one of the most vulnerable road users. Non-verbal communication between drivers and pedestrians seems to play an important role in the mitigation of collisions. The emergence of autonomous vehicles in traffic in the near future presses the need to investigate objective measures related to pedestrian crossing behaviour and the efficacy of communication devices on autonomous vehicles that might replace the nonverbal signals of the human driver. In order to objectively investigate the efficacy of communication devices on autonomous vehicles, 24 participants in this study were immersed in a virtual reality environment, via the use of an Oculus Rift and an Xsens Link motion tracking device. In this virtual reality environment, participants were presented with 18 series of autonomous vehicles. Each series represented one unique combination of independent variables and contained a total of five vehicles. The vehicles were either equipped with a Text display or Frontal Braking Lights that indicated the yielding intentions of the vehicle, or were without any external interface. Furthermore, the inter-vehicular distance between the second and the third vehicle in the series varied between 20, 30 or 40 meters. The participants were instructed to cross the road onto the zebra crossing in the virtual environment when they deemed it was safe to do so. The experiment was designed in such a way that the only crossing opportunity for the participants was between the second and third vehicle when the third vehicles yielded. The road crossing decision of the participants, operationalized by the objective measure of their forward gait velocity, was earlier in time when there was either a Text display or Frontal Braking Lights present on the third vehicle in the series, when the inter-vehicular distance between the second and third vehicle was 20 meters and the third and subsequent vehicles yielded. Congruently, the self-reported ability of participants to predict the behaviour of the oncoming vehicles was significantly better when the third vehicle had a Text display compared to when there was no external interface. However, no significant difference in self-reported ability to predict the behaviour of the oncoming vehicles was found for the Frontal Braking Lights. Furthermore, the forward gait velocity was significantly greater in the presence of a Text display compared to when there was no external interface present for the condition in which the inter-vehicular distance between the second and third vehicle was 30 meters and the third and subsequent vehicles yielded. This work shows that besides the current standard of subjective validation by pedestrians of external human-machine interfaces on autonomous vehicles these interfaces can objectively be validated through the recording and differentiation of body motions.