I'm working on some interesting stuff based on this DfT report:
http://www.dft.gov.uk/stellent/groups/d ... 031459.pdf
It tells us that "excessive speed" is recorded as a contributory factor as follows:
Fatal accidents: 28%
Serious accidents: 18%
Slight accidents: 11%
All accidents: 12%
Now there's something here I'm not quite getting me head around...
Do I believe that there's a
genuine differece is contributory factors between fatal accidents and (say) other high severity crashes? Well, no, not really, I don't suppose I do. I think of the risk triangle and I reckon there are two things that really make the difference between the layers - luck and degree of human error.
So does excessive speed make a fatal accident more likely? Or is it really that a fatality - a rare and quite random event - tends to select excessive speed? Now this strikes me as quite mad, but there's something in it that's seriously niggling at me to the extent that I can't actually eliminate the idea. Neither can I quite get a grip on what's causing the doubts.
Help!