fisherman wrote:
RobinXe wrote:
Sorry, but system-wide this holds no water.
It wasn't meant to. It was a specific response to a specific point.
I quoted the paper from Addiction which concentrated on the degree to which reaction times are slowed by alcohol.
PeterE quoted a paper by Borkenstein which drew its data from accident reports.
My point is that the Addiction paper can sensibly be extrapolated to show that low levels of alcohol pose a risk to drivers - because a delayed response is clearly not a good thing. Athough it makes no attempt to quantify that danger and is not, in my opinion, enough on its own to justify a lower legal limit.
Borkenstein throws some welcome light on accidents but doesn't contain anything which can sensibly be extrapolated to other aspects of motoring.
Extrapolation is not a particularly reliable statistical method however, since the Addiction study bears very little similarity to the driving task, which is so much more than 'lizard-brain' quick responses to emergent situations.
The Borkenstein results give the much more appealing option to interpolate, given their direct bearing on accidents!
Perhaps what we should be seeing here is that the low BAC drivers are
potentially modifying their attitude, which is mitigating their slightly slower reactions to such a degree that a net improvement is seen in their driving safety. This is, of course, no bad thing, since attitude has a far greater bearing on road safety than speed or (lowish) BACs.
We should not discount the possibility, however, that a low BAC has other effects that improve a driver's safety. They may be more relaxed, less fixated (allowing better appreciation of 'The Big Picture'), less time-concious, or any of a miriad of other possible effects, in many potential combinations.
In conclusion, I think it would be foolish to conduct any further tinkering with motoring laws without thorough and relevant study into their effects on a real, identifiable problem, and consideration for the enforcement and side-effects of such tinkering, beyond an 'Is to/Are to' edict.