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Journal Article

Citation

Lovell J, Hauer E. Transp. Res. Rec. 1986; 1068: 103-107.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1986, Transportation Research Board, National Research Council, National Academy of Sciences USA, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Past studies documenting the safety effect of converting intersection traffic control to all-way stops have consistently shown impressive accident reductions. Because, ordinarily, it was high-accident locations that were converted, it was difficult to know how much of the reduction was real and how much was an artifact of regression-to-the-mean. Data from three recent studies were reanalyzed and debiased. In addition, a new data set was assembled and examined. Analysis revealed that, although somewhat inflated, the reductions reported in the earlier studies were quite real and were confirmed by the new data. The empirical information contained in the data sets was captured in likelihood functions and the four functions were joined. Taken individually, the four data sets showed reductions in total accidents ranging from 37 to 62 percent. The joint likelihood function indicates a most likely accident reduction of 47 percent in total accidents.


Language: en

Keywords

ROADS AND STREETS; MOTOR TRANSPORTATION - Traffic Control; ACCIDENT PREVENTION - Analysis; URBAN PLANNING - Safety Codes

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