Predicting the adoption of connected autonomous vehicles: A new approach based on the theory of diffusion of innovations
Authored by Ahmadreza Talebian, Sabyasachee Mishra
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.trc.2018.06.005
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Abstract
On the grounds that individuals heavily rely on the information that
they receive from their peers when evaluating adoption of a radical
innovation, this paper proposes a new approach to forecast long-term
adoption of connected autonomous vehicles (CAVs). The concept of
resistance is employed to explain why individuals typically tend to
defer the adoption of an innovation. We assume that there exists a
social network among individuals through which they communicate based on
certain frequencies. In addition, individuals can be subject to media
advertisement based on certain frequencies. An individual's perceptions
are dynamic and change over time as the individual is exposed to
advertisement and communicates with satisfied and dissatisfied adopters.
We also explicitly allow willingness-to-pay (WTP) to change as a result
of peer-to-peer communication. An individual decides to adopt when (i)
there is a need for a new vehicles; (ii) his/her WTP is greater than CAV
price; and (iii) his/her overall impression about CAVs reaches a cutoff
value. Applicability of the proposed approach is shown using a survey of
employees of the University of Memphis. Our results show that the
automobile fleet will be near homogenous in about 2050 only if CAV
prices decrease at an annual rate of 15\% or 20\%. We find that a
6-month pre-introduction marketing campaign may have no significant
impact on adoption trend. Marketing is shown to ignite CAV diffusion but
its effect is capped. CAV market share will be close to 100\% only if
all adopters are satisfied with their purchases; therefore, the
probability that an individual becomes a satisfied adopter plays an
important role in the trend of adoption. The effect of the latter
probability is more pronounced as time goes by and is also more
prominent when CAV price reduces at greater rates. Some caveats may be
inserted when considering the study results as the findings are subject
to sample bias and data limitations.
Tags
Simulation
Agent-based modeling
Adoption
Social Network
Word-of-mouth
Diffusion of innovations
Model
Successive generations
Substitution
System
Transition
Cars
Discrete-choice
Willingness
Connected autonomous vehicles