The Arizona Republic

Studies: Automated safety systems help

- JOAN LOWY

WASHINGTON - Safety systems to prevent cars from drifting into another lane or that warn drivers of vehicles in their blind spots are beginning to live up to their potential to reduce crashes significan­tly, according to two studies recently released.

At the same time, research by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety raises concern that drivers may be less vigilant when relying on automated safety systems or become distracted by dashboard displays that monitor how the systems are performing.

The two institute studies found that vehicles with lane-keeping systems, some of which even nudge the vehicle back into its lane for the driver, and blind-spot monitoring systems had lower crash rates than those without the systems.

The lane-keeping study looked at police crash data from 25 states between 2009 and 2015 for vehicle models where the systems were sold as optional. Lane-keeping systems lowered rates of single-vehicle, sideswipe and head-on crashes of all severities by 11 percent, and crashes of those types in which there were injuries by 21 percent, the study found.

Because there were only 40 fatal crashes in the data, researcher­s used a simpler analysis that didn’t control for difference­s in drivers’ ages, genders, insurance risk and other factors for those crashes. They found the technology cut the fatal crash rate by 86 percent.

That’s probably high, said Jessica Cicchino, the institute’s vice president for research, but even if lanekeepin­g systems cut such crashes by half it would be significan­t, she said. Cicchino said about a quarter of traffic fatalities involve a vehicle drifting into another lane. If all passenger vehicles had been equipped with lane departure warning systems in 2015, an estimated 85,000 police-reported crashes would have been prevented, the study found.

A second institute study of blind-spot detection systems — usually warning lights in side mirrors — found the systems lower the rate of all lane-change crashes by 14 percent and the rate of such crashes with injuries by 23 percent. If all passenger vehicles were equipped with the systems, about 50,000 police-reported crashes a year could be prevented, the study found.

Lane-keeping, blind-spot monitoring, and automatic braking systems, which can prevent rear-end crashes, are some of the building blocks of self-driving car technology.

Greg Brannon, the Automobile Associatio­n of America’s director of automotive engineerin­g, called the institute’s studies “encouragin­g.” But he cautioned that is “critical that drivers understand the capabiliti­es and, more importantl­y, the limitation­s of the safety technology in their vehicle before getting behind the wheel.”

For all the promise technologi­es hold to enhance safety, researcher­s are also concerned that they are changing driver behavior.

A separate study by the insurance industry-funded institute and the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology’s AgeLab found that drivers using automated systems that scan for parking spots and then park the car spend a lot more time looking at dashboard displays than at the parking spot, the road in front or the road behind. That was true even when the systems were searching for a parking spot and drivers were still responsibl­e for steering. While the safety systems are reducing crashes, “it’s still possible that there are some crashes that are happening that wouldn’t have happened before because people are now behaving in different ways,” Cicchino said.

 ?? AP ?? A side mirror on a Ford Taurus offers a warning signal about a vehicle in a driver’s blind spot.
AP A side mirror on a Ford Taurus offers a warning signal about a vehicle in a driver’s blind spot.

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