New Understanding of Motorway Crash Risk From Newly Available Metrics

Changes in the way the road network is used over recent decades have altered the quantity, types and causes of crashes on all roads, especially those with high traffic demand such as motorways. As “flow” increases, density rises, vehicles drive closer together more frequently, and the required react...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: John Gaffney, Elizabeth Hovenden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Australasian College of Road Safety 2023-05-01
Series:Journal of Road Safety
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.33492/JRS-D-22-00027
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author John Gaffney
Elizabeth Hovenden
author_facet John Gaffney
Elizabeth Hovenden
author_sort John Gaffney
collection DOAJ
description Changes in the way the road network is used over recent decades have altered the quantity, types and causes of crashes on all roads, especially those with high traffic demand such as motorways. As “flow” increases, density rises, vehicles drive closer together more frequently, and the required reaction time is often less than the headway between vehicles. Vehicles are now heavier, wider, and taller, and in heavy traffic, drivers’ forward vision is greatly reduced. Dynamic traffic conditions (nucleations, shockwaves, congestion) make driving tasks more complex, elevating crash risk. Often conditions are beyond human and vehicle capability. Newly available metrics allow new questions to be asked, highlighting unsafe headways and clearance distances, underestimation of lane changing, and changing crash proportions. There are opportunities for new initiatives to be implemented to utilise this expanded understanding and to address the changed driving context.
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spelling doaj.art-4858b83f6fe84969b060083e7c7c5a042024-01-27T01:13:01ZengAustralasian College of Road SafetyJournal of Road Safety2652-42602652-42522023-05-01342New Understanding of Motorway Crash Risk From Newly Available MetricsJohn GaffneyElizabeth HovendenChanges in the way the road network is used over recent decades have altered the quantity, types and causes of crashes on all roads, especially those with high traffic demand such as motorways. As “flow” increases, density rises, vehicles drive closer together more frequently, and the required reaction time is often less than the headway between vehicles. Vehicles are now heavier, wider, and taller, and in heavy traffic, drivers’ forward vision is greatly reduced. Dynamic traffic conditions (nucleations, shockwaves, congestion) make driving tasks more complex, elevating crash risk. Often conditions are beyond human and vehicle capability. Newly available metrics allow new questions to be asked, highlighting unsafe headways and clearance distances, underestimation of lane changing, and changing crash proportions. There are opportunities for new initiatives to be implemented to utilise this expanded understanding and to address the changed driving context.https://doi.org/10.33492/JRS-D-22-00027
spellingShingle John Gaffney
Elizabeth Hovenden
New Understanding of Motorway Crash Risk From Newly Available Metrics
Journal of Road Safety
title New Understanding of Motorway Crash Risk From Newly Available Metrics
title_full New Understanding of Motorway Crash Risk From Newly Available Metrics
title_fullStr New Understanding of Motorway Crash Risk From Newly Available Metrics
title_full_unstemmed New Understanding of Motorway Crash Risk From Newly Available Metrics
title_short New Understanding of Motorway Crash Risk From Newly Available Metrics
title_sort new understanding of motorway crash risk from newly available metrics
url https://doi.org/10.33492/JRS-D-22-00027
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AT elizabethhovenden newunderstandingofmotorwaycrashriskfromnewlyavailablemetrics