Hope this is of interest, in reply to my question about conducting a properly scientific test of gatso effictiveness with a control group of Garden Gnomes:
If you cut and paste the link below, you may find this information by Napier University useful, as it deals with some of the issues you have raised concerning speed and cameras.
http://www.rospa.com/road/congress2002/ ... adling.pdf
I doubt that you would find any road safety professional agree to your experiment with garden gnomes as it would show a blatant disregard for human life. We spend a great deal of time analysing collision patterns to see where a camera can be most beneficial - it is not a random science. To "test" a location in this way and gambling with a strong likelihood that people could be killed and seriously injured would be irresponsible at best.
Many thanks for your interest
Safe Speed for Life Admin
And my reply:
But that is just it. The point is that you have no conclusive proof that speed cameras have saved even a single life, and until you undertake a proper scientific test using a control group (garden gnomes or parsnips, doesn’t matter) as any drug testing procedure would do, you never will. For all you know from the statistics you have, all accident reductions you attribute to speed cameras could be explained by the well known statistical phenomenon of regression to the mean. Perhaps this from Professor Stone, emeritus professor of statistics, University College London, would explain better
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/Stats/research/Resrprts/speed.pdf
Perhaps it is you that is showing a blatant disregard for human life by not investigating seriously and scientifically the true effectiveness of speed cameras, and thereby risking missing other potentially more important factors.
Thank you in anticipation
Richard Bryant