Skip to main content

New motorcyclist survey to determine views on ITS

The RIDERSCAN project is now launching its third and last survey targeting European motorcyclists. Focusing on new technologies and powered two wheelers, the survey will feed the RIDERSCAN report on Traffic Management, providing an opportunity for European riders to express their views on coming intelligent transport technologies. Efficient transportation has become critical for Europe to remain competitive globally. Technological development is often intended to provide people with more freedom and the ti
January 20, 2014 Read time: 3 mins
The RIDERSCAN project is now launching its third and last survey targeting European motorcyclists. Focusing on new technologies and powered two wheelers, the survey will feed the RIDERSCAN report on Traffic Management, providing an opportunity for European riders to express their views on coming intelligent transport technologies.

Efficient transportation has become critical for Europe to remain competitive globally. Technological development is often intended to provide people with more freedom and the time to perform other activities in a better way and is seen by all major stakeholders as an essential component of tomorrow's transport system.

Motorcycling is about freedom and powered two wheeler (PTW) users are regular market consumers using new technology to gain time and freedom, to improve their riding experience or to increase their safety. However, the riding activity, particularly complex, differs greatly from the driving and has, up to now been poorly studied. As a result, most of discussed technologies are coming from the car industry, designed with little understanding of the riding constraints, and have led to poor acceptance by the riders. Moreover, motorcycle accident causation and risk factors are not fully known and the current state-of-the art of ITS for transport has not undergone any impact assessment with regard to positive or negative consequences for motorcycling. More specifically, no research has been done taking into consideration the variety of riding models and the specificities of the riding tasks. As a result, motorcycling needs to be better understood and integrated into ITS innovation and deployment today to guarantee that motorcyclists can also benefit from technological improvement.

The RIDERSCAN project is launching a new survey on ITS and motorcycling safety to tackle this information shortfall. The ITS - Intelligent Transport Systems - User Survey is the third and last survey launched in the context of the project and will feed the report on Traffic Management and new technologies.

The survey is asking riders to evaluate their willingness to test, use, and buy systems that are still in development. The aim is to draw a European map of rider awareness and acceptance of new technologies applied to the transport systems.

The survey is divided in two sections, with the first asking question about mobility habits to gather information about experience and road habits in general. The second asks about ITS applications/systems for PTW safety, allowing those responding to provide an opinion on applications discussed among ITS experts.

RIDERSCAN aims at bridging the gap between road safety authorities, researchers, and industry stakeholders by setting up a detailed survey over ITS systems in relation with motorcycling and riding activities. Its objective is to collect the views of those first impacted by the development of new technologies on bikes.  

The survey will last for three months and preliminary results will be presented at the next European Motorcyclists Forum on March 5th, 2014 in the European Parliament, Brussels.

Related Content

  • A vision of roads
    September 3, 2012
    By 2040 European roads could be built differently, and hopefully be safer, according to the EU research programme NR2C
  • Accident prevention leading the road safety fight
    February 23, 2012
    ASECAP and its members are among many oragnisations leading the fight to improve road safety Many European organisations have pledged their support to the goal of dramatically reducing even further the number of accidents, fatalities and serious injuries on roads. And at its annual road safety conference in the Czech capital Prague, ASECAP (the European Association of Operators of Tolled Road Infrastructures), presented EU institutions, national authorities and transport stakeholders "the outstanding resul
  • IRF Geneva highlights making roads safe: a priority for all
    May 15, 2014
    IRF Geneva’s Susanna Zammataro highlights the importance of the Federation’s ongoing commitment to the work of the United Nations Road Safety Collaboration, with which she serves as co-chair of the project group dedicated to Safer Roads and Mobility On 10th April, the United Nations General Assembly was due to discuss a new global road safety resolution. For those who might dismiss this as just another piece of paper condemned to sit on government shelves and gather dust, this a reminder of a few facts
  • Bikers and animals
    May 10, 2016
    In the US a kindhearted motorcyclist put her life at risk when she saw a kitten fall out of a vehicle while she waited at the traffic lights at a busy intersection. The woman rider ran forward from her motorcycle, gesturing at vehicles to stop so as to prevent the ginger kitten from being run over. The woman handed the kitten to a passerby before returning to her motorcycle and moving it to the side of the intersection. She then collected the animal and has since taken it home, renaming it Skidmarks.