Understanding road and car safety is essential to minimising collisions on the road. ANCAP has established a program to shine a light on the real-world driver experience and usability of lane support systems.
ANCAP SAFETY’s official collision avoidance testing has embarked on a new research project designed to intentionally capture the steering force, intervention timing, and correction severity of Lane Keep Assist (LKA) and Emergency Lane Keeping (ELK) on vehicles already star rated.
This additional layer of examination looks beyond a vehicle’s ability to intervene and prevent unintentional side-swipe, head-on, or run-off-road crash as determined through ANCAP’s official star rating assessments.
The project focuses on the sophistication and integration quality of lane support systems (LSS) from a range of vehicle brands and models.
Aspects interrogated through this research program include
- Vehicle path and position – is the autonomous intervention smooth and intuitive?
- Intervention timing – is the system overly-cautious, exhibited through premature/early intervention?
- Steering torque and angle – are there sharp, unnecessary or jerky steering inputs, leading to a feeling of loss of control?
- Lateral vehicle acceleration – is the sideways force experienced by the driver severe and unnatural?
This research follows feedback ANCAP has received from consumers concerned that the safety systems fitted to their new cars are providing an adverse driver experience.
A pilot group of vehicles have been put through their paces against a baseline ‘positive reference’ vehicle, with early insights showing clear room for improvement.
ANCAP Chief Executive Officer, Carla Hoorweg, highlighted how the research project is a step forward to help vehicle manufacturers improve the functionality, calibration and integration of their active safety systems.
“Good system design and properly tuned systems are critical to consumer acceptance, and the aspects we’ve examined with this research are those that manufacturers should already be factoring into their systems,” Hoorweg says.
“The pilot group of vehicle models we’ve assessed has been assembled from direct consumer feedback, where a specific list of models were identified as offering a fairly rudimentary response. Unfortunately the behaviour of these vehicles is having consumers question the benefits of these systems, and in some cases, turn them off.”
“What we don’t want to see is these systems being badged as ‘annoying’ and switched off.”
“What we want to demonstrate are the differences in vehicle behaviour, and by sharing these results, encourage manufacturers to improve their systems. This will in turn improve the acceptance of these systems by their customers.”
The results of this pilot project will be shared with manufacturers and used to inform refinements to ANCAP’s upcoming 2026-2028 test protocols and criteria.
Additional vehicle models will be examined against the same research criteria over the course of the year, with full results to be released once the broad program of work is complete.