The effects of interstate speed limits on driving speeds: Some new evidence Fred Mannering.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Probabilistic Models of Motorcyclists' Injury Severities in Single- and Multi-vehicle Crashes Peter T. Savolainen, Ph.D. Wayne State University Fred Mannering,
Advertisements

58 th Traffic Safety Conference Romell Cooks Regional Administrator Central Region May 10,
Relation of Speed and Speed Limits to Crashes National Forum on Speeding Washington, D.C., June 15, 2005 Susan Ferguson, Ph.D.
Drinking and Driving. Video Discussion What were some of your thoughts as you watched the video about these real drinking and driving accidents?
Group 4 | Presentation on June 20, 2012 | 1 TERMPROJECT TERM PROJECT: Determinants of Fatal Car Accidents in the United States MBA 555: Managerial Economics.
DRIVING TOO FAST FOR CONDITIONS A Collision Countermeasures Presentation.
Around the Globe Spring Road Fatalities Recent Trends (world wide) Population Motor vehicles.
SAFETY AND ACCIDENT AVOIDANCE
An analysis of drivers’ offsetting response to vehicle safety features Cliff Winston, Vikram Maheshri, Fred Mannering.
Driving Intelligence Robert R. Arguelles Continental Teves, N.A. February 2 nd, 2004 Active Vehicle Safety: Advanced Vehicle Mobility and Stability Control.
The Nature and Dimensions of the Road Safety Problem Hossein Naraghi CE 590 Special Topics Safety January 2003.
42,636 deaths (Decrease of 0.6% over 2003) 2.8 million injured 64% killed were drivers 29% were passengers Fatalities/100,000 population – higher for.
The Promotion of Active Safety Measures in Japan - collision damage mitigation brake - September 2007 Road Transport Bureau Road Transport Bureau MLIT.
Chapter 1 Driving and Mobility. Driver Education Information Provide an opportunity to learn as much of the information and skills you need to be a good.
Influence of drivers’ comprehension of posted signs on their safety related characteristics Hashim Al-Madani Accident Analysis and Prevention 32 (2000)
You are part of a system Your Driving Task Your Driving Responsibilities Your Driver’s License.
The High Way Transportation System and Risk Management Traffic Laws.
® © 2013 National Safety Council Safe Teen Driving Inexperience Support for this project was provided by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
11. 2 Recall from the Lecture on Epidemics and Substance Abuse The importance of road traffic collisions determining the index of disabilty adjusted life.
Chapter 5 Controlling your vehicle
DEFENSIVE DRIVING TRAINING. What's difficult about driving? Increasing amount of vehicles on the road Other drivers attitudes Weather conditions Heavy.
Managing Risk When Driving. All Licensed Drivers – 191,275,719 All Drivers Involvement Rate in Fatal Crashes/100,000 Licensed Drivers – (37,795.
Highway Transportation System
5 Points of Safe Driving *Don’t Drink and Drive *Speeding isn’t worth it *Most fatalities occur in smaller roads *Wear your seatbelts! *Don’t be distracted.
1 Highway Venue. Injury Facts  2 Injury Data Highlights Injury Facts® 2011 Edition Injury Facts® 2011 Edition Most current data available – 2009, 2008,
® © 2011 National Safety Council Highway Venue. © 2011 National Safety Council 2 Highway Venue 212 million drivers (+1%) 255 million vehicles (+
Around the Globe Fall 2015.
Distracted Driving in New York State: A Status Report Presentation at 29 th International Forum on Traffic Records and Highway Information Systems Denver,
Speed Limits, Speed Control and Stopping Regulations.
Don’t be a Typical Teen Driver!!!!!! Survey from more than 1,000 teens/ from April % Text- message while driving 66% Exceed speed limit by 10 mph.
Video Discussion What were some of your thoughts as you watched the video about these real drinking and driving accidents?
1 Driver Distractions: The Ticking Time Bomb Lee Whitehead Director, DDC State Program Administration September 2007.
Highway accident severities and the mixed logit model: An exploratory analysis John Milton, Venky Shankar, Fred Mannering.
Attitudes to road safety Alun Humphrey Research Director National Centre for Social Research.
Asleep at the Wheel: The Prevalence and Impact of Drowsy Driving.
Prepared for Massachusetts Executive Office of Public Safety and Security Office of Grants and Research, Highway Safety Division Traffic Safety Forum Presented.
Vulnerable road users: Pedestrians & Motorcycle and bicycle riders.
User perceptions of highway roughness Kevan Shafizadeh and Fred Mannering.
1 Tobit Analysis of Vehicle Accident Rates on Interstate Highways Panagiotis Ch. Anastasopoulos, Andrew Tarko, and Fred Mannering.
Safety Recommendation A “Revise 14 CFR Part 91, 135, and 121 to require that all occupants be restrained during takeoff, landing, and turbulent conditions,
Safe Driving Presented by La’Tara Smith. Statistics for Young Drivers 16 year-olds have higher crash rates than drivers of any other age. 16-year-olds.
1 The Highway Transportation System. 2 Highway Transportation System (HTS) Simple neighborhood lanes, complex super highways, and every kind of street.
Crash Facts and Teen Drivers Driver Risk Prevention Curriculum State of New Hampshire Departments of Education and Safety Division of Program Support.
MISSION To educate and influence people to prevent accidental injury and death. VISION Making our world safer. February 2009.
Leonard Evans President, Science Serving Society President-Emeritus, International Traffic Medicine Association (ITMA) Bloomfield Hills, Michigan USA What.
CHAPTER 3 - SAFETY TAKE A TEST. 1. You can detect carbon monoxide (CO) by its smell color taste none of the above 2.Safety belts should be worn only by.
User perceptions of highway roughness
20-April-07UNECE Transport Division Road Safety Week 23 – 27 April 2007.
DEFENSIVE DRIVING TRAINING What's difficult about driving? Increasing amount of vehicles on the road Other drivers attitudes Weather conditions Heavy.
TALKING FREIGHT SEMINAR: Truck Separated Lanes/Truck Tolling MARCH 16, 2005 DARRIN ROTH DIRECTOR OF HIGHWAY OPERATIONS AMERICAN TRUCKING ASSOCIATIONS.
Edward L. Fischer P.E..  Ed, it was hard to read slides from back of room with this background.  Can I change it? Nancy Brickman.
TRB Update AASHTO SCOHTS Annual Meeting April 2016.
Lesson Plan Day 7 >Power Point Day 7 >First aid booklet, what two do in emergencies, and what to do until the ambulance arrives. >Review techniques on.
SEATBELTS. Overview: seatbelts > What are seatbelts? > Seatbelt use in Canada > Myths and misconceptions about seatbelts > Solutions.
Unit 4 Lesson 1 What Is Killing Us?. d d d d d d d d d d Leading Cause of Death What is the leading cause of death for people ages 1-34 in the US? 1.Injuries.
The Influence of Peers and the Media: Motor Vehicles and Safety Precautions Amanda McGoye.
Aviation Law Section of the Chicago Bar Association April 6, 2016 Panel: Jan Brown, David Rapoport and Captain Charles Barnett.
APPLICATIONS OF POISSON AND CHI-SQUARED (χ 2 ) DISTRIBUTION FOR COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF ACCIDENT FREQUENCIES ON HIGHWAYS Dr. S.S. Valunjkar Prof. P. M.
Life Goes By Way Too Fast to Not
Effectiveness of Rear Seat Safety Belt Use
Caldwell and Wilson (1999) 1. Determine primary rating factor for a road section based on traffic volume and user types 2. Primary rating factor is then.
Interpretation of Alabama’s Safety Belt and Child Restraint Laws
Positive choices with driving:
Car Safety NEED PRACTICE QUESTIONS.
Chapter One Driving and Mobility
Enterprise High School
THE YOUTH IN THE SYSTEM OF ROAD SAFETY
Life Goes By Way Too Fast to Not
North Dakota Driver Risk Prevention Curriculum Guide
Presentation transcript:

The effects of interstate speed limits on driving speeds: Some new evidence Fred Mannering

Background  Emergency Highway Energy Conservation Act in 1974, mandates the 55 mph national maximum speed limit on interstate highways  National Highway System Designation Act of 1995 that gave states complete freedom to set interstate speed limits  Interstate speed limits now are set 55 mph to 65 mph, 70 mph, or more

Consequences of higher speed limits:  Many studies concluded the lower 55 mph speed limits saved lives  Kockelman and Bottom (2006):  From 55 to 65 mph results in a 3% increase in the crash rate and a 24% increase in the probability of a fatality once an accident occurred  From 65 to 75 mph resulted in a lower 0.64% increase in the crash rate and in a lower 12% increase in the probability of fatal injury once an accident occurred

Consequences of higher speed limits:  Possible reasons for lower increases with speed limits 65 to 75mph:  Drivers' heightened awareness of risk at higher speeds  Roads assigned the higher 75 mph in their study’s sample may have been inherently safer

Are higher speed limits safer?  Lave and Elias (1994) argue increase from 55 mph to 65 mph saved lives because of: 1. shifts in law enforcement resources 2. higher-speed-limit interstates to attract riskier drivers away from inherently more dangerous non-interstate highways 3. possible reductions in speed variances

Why conflicting safety results? Time varying changes in factors such as: 1. highway enforcement, 2. vehicle miles traveled, 3. vehicle occupancy, 4. seat belt usage, 5. alcohol use and driving, 6. vehicle fleet mix (proportions of passenger cars, minivans, pickup trucks, and sport utility vehicles), 7. vehicle safety features (increasing adoption of air bags, antilock brakes, other active safety systems), 8. speed limits on other road classes and in other states, 9. driver expectations, and driver adjustment and adaptation to risk

Current study:  Focus not on safety but normal speed selection under low-volume conditions  Consider a range of concurrently existing interstate speeds

Effect of Speed Limits on Drivers' Choice of Speed  Individual drivers have an “optimal” speed (In the absence of speed limits) …. trading of safety and speed  In the presence of speed limits, drivers adjust their speeds to account for the risk of detection by law enforcement, respect for the law, etc.

Choice of Speed Following Peltzman (1975), Viscusi (1984), Winston, Maheshri, Mannering (2006)  Individuals maximize driving utility by trading off safety, S, and driving intensity (speed, risk- taking at intersections), s  There will be a marginal rate of transformation (MRT) between S and s.

A Speed limit below point A speed ● ● ● C B S S*S* s s* Ss U0U0 Speed limit above point A speed D ● ● E Safety (probability of avoiding an accident) Speed

In this figure:  With no speed limit, Point A is the driver’s optimal speed  With speed limit set below Point A, driver selects a new equilibrium Point C, which is likely between Points A and B  With speed limit set above Point A, driver selects a new equilibrium Point E, which is likely between Points A and D

A Speed limit below point A speed ● ● ● C B S S*S* s s* Ss U0U0 Speed limit above point A speed D ● ● E Safety (probability of avoiding an accident) Speed

Objective:  Empirically study factors that determine selection of Points C and E (speed selection in the presence of speed limits)

Data  Survey of Purdue students and faculty  Key questions: 1.On an interstate with a 55 mph speed limit and little traffic, about how fast do you normally drive? 2.On an interstate with a 65 mph speed limit and little traffic, about how fast do you normally drive? 3.On an interstate with a 70 mph speed limit and little traffic, about how fast do you normally drive?

OF 204 respondents:  1 person normally drove below the 55 mph speed limit (9 reported they drive at the 55mph speed limit)  3 people normally drove below the 65 mph speed limit (11 reported they drive at the 65 mph speed limit)  6 people normally drove below the 70 mph speed limit (20 reported they drive at the 70 mph speed limit)

Methodology  Speed choices under three speed limits  Estimating separate equations would result in inefficient coefficient estimates

Approach

Where:  Speed 70, Speed 65 and Speed 55 are the number of miles per hour respondents normally drive above the speed limit (with little traffic) for 70, 65, and 55 mph speed limits  Z is a vector of driver and driver-household characteristics,  X is a vector of vector of driver preferences and opinions,   's,  's, are vectors of estimable parameters, and   's are disturbance terms

Use seemingly unrelated regression estimation (SURE)  To account for cross-equation correlation  Instead of  Use generalized least squares

One-tailed t-test results: ** significantly different from zero at more than 95% confidence, * significantly different from zero at more than 90% confidence

Findings (70 mph roads)  Drive faster:  Higher income,  Believe Indiana has good pavement quality,  Believe Germany makes most prestigious cars  Drive slower:  Older,  Number of children under 6 years old,  First licensed at 17 years old or older

Findings (65 mph roads)  Drive faster:  Male  Higher income,  Believe Indiana has good pavement quality  Drive slower:  Older,  Number of children under 6 years old,  First licensed at 17 years old or older,  Believe Japan makes most prestigious cars

Findings (55 mph roads)  Drive faster:  Higher income,  Believe Indiana has good pavement quality,  Believe Germany makes most prestigious cars  Drive slower:  Lower income,  Number of children under 6 years old,  First licensed at 17 years old or older,  Believe Japan makes most prestigious cars

Conclusions  Wide range of socioeconomic factors influence speed choice and the effect of speed limits on it  An expanded sample to take into account the effect of traffic congestion on speed choice could reveal important speed/flow relationships