Assessment of techniques for cost-effectiveness of highway accident countermeasures. Final report.

Author(s)
McFarland, W.F. Griffin, L.I. Rollins, J.B. Stockton, W.R. Phillips, D.T. & Dudek, C.L.
Year
Abstract

Improved cost-effectiveness techniques are developed for evaluating highway safety programs. These improved techniques include: better methods of determining accident costs; statistical procedures for calculating accident costs; consistent system for evaluating accident cost and countermeasure effectiveness; and improved incremental benefit-cost algorithm for ranking safety projects. In addition to developing improved cost-effectiveness techniques the report reviews selected accident countermeasure studies and provides a critique of current procedures for evaluating safety programs. Three techniques are recommended for use in allocating safety funds: incremental benefit-cost, with improved algorithm; dynamic programming; and integer programming. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
B 17000 /10 / IRRD 251657
Source

College Station, TX, Texas A & M University, Texas Transportation Institute TTI, 1979, 351 p., 199 ref.; FHWA-RD-79 -53

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