AMPS, Skidmarks and ITS: Managing Merging to Improve Safety and Traffic Flow

2002-01-0760

03/04/2002

Event
SAE 2002 World Congress & Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
The genesis of the AMPS (Absent-Minded Professor Syndrome) Theory in presentations in Detroit, Paris, Seoul and Torino is reviewed. A ‘rappel’ is issued on the empirical relationship between the numbers of fatalities, PI's and ‘fender-benders’ and thus, by extension, ‘near-misses’ (as ‘recorded’ by skidmarks). Data on skidmark incidence from expressways in Australia, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy and Canada are analyzed using the AMPS theory. Observations on roads around the world (U.S.A., Korea, Japan and India as well as Denmark, France and Austria) and data on accident location (Verkehrspolizeiinspektion Ingolstadt) strongly support the detailed analysis. The author concludes that this evidence on ‘near-misses’ presents an opportunity to use ITS to substantially cut expressway ‘accidents’ by ‘managed merging’ at expressway entrance points.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2002-01-0760
Pages
12
Citation
Gullon, A., "AMPS, Skidmarks and ITS: Managing Merging to Improve Safety and Traffic Flow," SAE Technical Paper 2002-01-0760, 2002, https://doi.org/10.4271/2002-01-0760.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Mar 4, 2002
Product Code
2002-01-0760
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English