• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: Sensor-Friendly Vehicle and Roadway Cooperative Safety Systems: Benefits Estimation
  • Beteiligte: Misener, James A.; Thorpe, Chuck; Ferlis, Robert; Hearne, Ron; Siegal, Mel; Perkowski, Joe
  • Erschienen: SAGE Publications, 2001
  • Erschienen in: Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board, 1746 (2001) 1, Seite 22-29
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • DOI: 10.3141/1746-04
  • ISSN: 0361-1981; 2169-4052
  • Schlagwörter: Mechanical Engineering ; Civil and Structural Engineering
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  • Beschreibung: An analysis was performed to estimate the potential national costs and benefits of cooperative vehicle and roadway measures to enhance the effectiveness of driver assistance systems. These cooperative measures—query-response communication systems, light-emitting-diode brake light messaging, radar cross-section paint-striping modifications, fluorescent paint for lane and other marking applications, passive amplifiers on license plates, spatial tetrahedral arrays of reflectors, and in-vehicle corner cubes—are briefly described, along with assumptions that were made regarding performance. For the example lane departure case, the incremental nationwide effectiveness over an autonomous collision-avoidance system is estimated and monetized. This was generally determined with respect to annual crash-reduction savings, although the technique used allows other mobility benefits to be considered. The marginal benefits of providing each sensor-friendly technology were then calculated and aggregated across the various Intelligent Vehicle Initiative services so that a total marginal benefit was determined for each technology. Complementing this, a method has been established to estimate the magnitude of at- and near-intersection lead-vehicle-not-moving crashes for these technologies. Together, these methods illustrate national benefits across all crash types (the three-step process) and a more focused means to estimate benefits for a particular crash type (rear-end collisions at or near intersections)—and provide a composite approach to the problem.