alexjerrim wrote:
Some questions to consider.
What if someone who is close to you is in that 85%?
Let's say they are crashed into by one of the 5%. If they were driving at a safe speed they could have avoided the crash even though they may legally have been 'in the right'.
Can we help the 85% better avoid the 5%?
Can we help the 85% learn behaviours that can make them safer than the remaining 85% (ie safe speed)?
Isn't there a difference between 'safer than average' and safer than the average of your particular group?
Careful now Alex, have you any idea how much time we can spend discussing this stuff?
One point is we're coming from different perspectives - your objective is to improve the individual. My objective is to improve the road safety system.
This is old unpublished work of mine that might see the light of day because there's now some science that may support it. Consider this graph:
We're showing a frequency plot (in green) of drivers ranked by quality - the low quality drivers are so rated because of their crash risk (in red).
Improving road safety absolutely depends on improving the mean driver's ability to avoid a crash. The three regions I have defined need differing sorts of treatment.
The low quality drivers need remedial training and the attentions of the law. If they can't make a reasonable standard of safety, let's get them off the road. This small group (apparently) is responsible for the majority of accidents.
The large middle group need to learn from their mistakes and to be encouraged to improve.
The top group need recognition, encouragement and privilege, partly to reward them for the standards achieved, but also to send signals to the medium group about the prospects for improvement.
Undoubtedly improvements in the middle and upper groups will make them far more able to avoid the errors of the bottom group.
The most wonderful thing about this is that our average driver has a very acceptable crash risk despite having masses of room for improvement. Hell, making the roads ten times safer is within the bounds of possibility and that's before we add in the benefits of vehicle engineering improvements.