APPROACH SPEEDS AT UNCONTROLLED INTERSECTIONS WITH RESTRICTED SIGHT DISTANCES

Author(s)
LOVEGROVE, SA UNIV OF MELBOURNE
Abstract

An unobtrusive study was made of vehicles approaching low-volume, uncontrolled cross-intersections, with restricted right sight distances, at which the give-way-to-the-right rule was operative. The hypotheses were that one factor that influenced motorists' approach speeds on the major road was the frequency with which vehicles emergedfrom the right and that most drivers exceeded the safe approach speed when this probability was low. The mean speeds at a low- and a high-probability intersection were 31 mph (50 km/h) and 22 mph (35 km/h), ns . 140 and 163, respectively (p <.01). (the maximum safe approach speed at each intersection was calculated to be 18 mph - 29 km/h). It was concluded that many drivers deliberately overrely on theirpredictions about the typical behaviour of other drivers and that this is responsible for the behaviour defined as hazardous. Further, it was hypothesized that when drivers exceeded the safe approach speed, they were relying on taking evasive action to avoid a vehicle that might emerge from the right. Reduced friction at the low- and high-probability intersections was accompanied by speed reductions of 3.0 mph (4.9 km/h) and 3.5 mph (5.6 km/h) and ns . 28 and 48, respectively (p <.01).(A)

Request publication

5 + 5 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

Publication

Library number
I 237074 IRRD 7800
Source

J APPL PSYCHOL WASHINGTON, DC USA U0021-9010 SERIAL 1978-10 E63 5 PAG: 635-43 N0 P2 R2 T11 YA

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.