Co-operative, Connected and Automated Mobility (CCAM) is of increasing interest to the transport community across the world, though is still maturing. The Horizon Europe project FAME is developing a European framework for testing CCAM on public roads. As part of this, a common evaluation methodology (EU-CEM) is being developed, which provides guidance on how to set up and carry out an evaluation or assessment of direct and indirect impacts of CCAM solutions on different user groups and wider society. Objectives include ensuring that evaluations can be complementary planned with results that are easy to compare, as well as establishing a common vocabulary to support projects in the CCAM community. This paper sets out how the EU-CEM is being developed and embedded into CCAM research in Europe, with a particular emphasis on how the project has adopted an agile and iterative approach to the CEM development alongside meaningful and sustained engagement with stakeholders.

错误:搜索内容不能为空,请输入英文关键词
错误:关键词超出字数限制,请精简
高级检索

Developing EU-CEM: A Common Evaluation Methodology for Evaluating Co-operative, Connected and Automated Mobility

  • Gillian Harrison,
  • Elina Aittoniemi,
  • Yvonne Barnard,
  • Satu Innamaa,
  • Torsten Geissler,
  • S. M. Hassan Mahdavi Moghaddam,
  • Eric Tol,
  • Isabel Wilmink,
  • Floris Hooft

摘要

Co-operative, Connected and Automated Mobility (CCAM) is of increasing interest to the transport community across the world, though is still maturing. The Horizon Europe project FAME is developing a European framework for testing CCAM on public roads. As part of this, a common evaluation methodology (EU-CEM) is being developed, which provides guidance on how to set up and carry out an evaluation or assessment of direct and indirect impacts of CCAM solutions on different user groups and wider society. Objectives include ensuring that evaluations can be complementary planned with results that are easy to compare, as well as establishing a common vocabulary to support projects in the CCAM community. This paper sets out how the EU-CEM is being developed and embedded into CCAM research in Europe, with a particular emphasis on how the project has adopted an agile and iterative approach to the CEM development alongside meaningful and sustained engagement with stakeholders.