Assessing the Sustainability Implications of Autonomous Vehicles: Recommendations for Research Community Practice

Autonomous vehicles (AV) are poised to induce disruptive changes, with significant implications for the economy, the environment, and society. This article reviews prior research on AVs and society, and articulates future needs. Research to assess future societal change induced by AVs has grown dram...

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Main Authors: Eric Williams, Vivekananda Das, Andrew Fisher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-03-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/5/1902
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spelling doaj-9d4088fc5c55492daee7ee5c050d909f2020-11-25T03:02:16ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-03-01125190210.3390/su12051902su12051902Assessing the Sustainability Implications of Autonomous Vehicles: Recommendations for Research Community PracticeEric Williams0Vivekananda Das1Andrew Fisher2Golisano Institute for Sustainability, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY 14623, USAGolisano Institute for Sustainability, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY 14623, USAEnvironmental Resources Management, Fairport, NY 14450, USAAutonomous vehicles (AV) are poised to induce disruptive changes, with significant implications for the economy, the environment, and society. This article reviews prior research on AVs and society, and articulates future needs. Research to assess future societal change induced by AVs has grown dramatically in recent years. The critical challenge in assessing the societal implications of AVs is forecasting how consumers and businesses will use them. Researchers are predicting the future use of AVs by consumers through stated preference surveys, finding analogs in current behaviors, utility optimization models, and/or staging empirical “AV-equivalent” experiments. While progress is being made, it is important to recognize that potential behavioral change induced by AVs is massive in scope and that forecasts are difficult to validate. For example, AVs could result in many consumers abandoning private vehicles for ride-share services, vastly increased travel by minors, the elderly and other groups unable to drive, and/or increased recreation and commute miles driven due to increased utility of in-vehicle time. We argue that significantly increased efforts are needed from the AVs and society research community to ensure 1) the important behavioral changes are analyzed and 2) models are explicitly evaluated to characterize and reduce uncertainty.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/5/1902autonomous vehiclessustainabilityresearch practiceuncertaintycomplex systems
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eric Williams
Vivekananda Das
Andrew Fisher
spellingShingle Eric Williams
Vivekananda Das
Andrew Fisher
Assessing the Sustainability Implications of Autonomous Vehicles: Recommendations for Research Community Practice
Sustainability
autonomous vehicles
sustainability
research practice
uncertainty
complex systems
author_facet Eric Williams
Vivekananda Das
Andrew Fisher
author_sort Eric Williams
title Assessing the Sustainability Implications of Autonomous Vehicles: Recommendations for Research Community Practice
title_short Assessing the Sustainability Implications of Autonomous Vehicles: Recommendations for Research Community Practice
title_full Assessing the Sustainability Implications of Autonomous Vehicles: Recommendations for Research Community Practice
title_fullStr Assessing the Sustainability Implications of Autonomous Vehicles: Recommendations for Research Community Practice
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the Sustainability Implications of Autonomous Vehicles: Recommendations for Research Community Practice
title_sort assessing the sustainability implications of autonomous vehicles: recommendations for research community practice
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Autonomous vehicles (AV) are poised to induce disruptive changes, with significant implications for the economy, the environment, and society. This article reviews prior research on AVs and society, and articulates future needs. Research to assess future societal change induced by AVs has grown dramatically in recent years. The critical challenge in assessing the societal implications of AVs is forecasting how consumers and businesses will use them. Researchers are predicting the future use of AVs by consumers through stated preference surveys, finding analogs in current behaviors, utility optimization models, and/or staging empirical “AV-equivalent” experiments. While progress is being made, it is important to recognize that potential behavioral change induced by AVs is massive in scope and that forecasts are difficult to validate. For example, AVs could result in many consumers abandoning private vehicles for ride-share services, vastly increased travel by minors, the elderly and other groups unable to drive, and/or increased recreation and commute miles driven due to increased utility of in-vehicle time. We argue that significantly increased efforts are needed from the AVs and society research community to ensure 1) the important behavioral changes are analyzed and 2) models are explicitly evaluated to characterize and reduce uncertainty.
topic autonomous vehicles
sustainability
research practice
uncertainty
complex systems
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/5/1902
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