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Australian drivers are reluctant to trust new car safety technologies, a study says

New research has found the majority of Australian drivers are not yet ready to fully utilize technologies such as adaptive cruise control, brake assist and in-car park assist, despite owning vehicles equipped with such features.

A study by an Australian service and research company mycar have found that although 76 per cent of drivers own cars with some form of advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS), only around 30 per cent of Australians have used adaptive cruise control or lane assist in their most-used vehicle.

In addition, only 28 percent of respondents said they used brake assist and only 22 percent used parking assistance.

Tom Hatch, head of technical transformation at mycar, says: “The trust gap is not about skills, but about trust and understanding.”

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“Features like adaptive cruise control and lane departure warning are intended to make driving safer and less stressful, but only about a third of drivers use them regularly,” he said Daily Sparkz.

“These technologies can reduce the risk of collisions, reduce fatigue and improve efficiency, but uncertainty about how they work – and whether they can be trusted – is holding drivers back.”

The research comes at a time when driver assistance systems are becoming increasingly sophisticated, as evidenced by Tesla’s recent launch of its fully autonomous driving (monitored) System in Australia and New Zealand.

Although this feature is currently limited to one brand and costs more than $10,000 to activate, it is likely that more brands will develop their own systems in the coming years, making the technology more accessible.