SafeSpeed wrote:
The new term is "certainty distance".
That’s fine but are you sure you want to use 'certainty distance' for this? There is no
guarentee that what you (the driver) perceive of as a certainty actually is certain.
When you start a journey, you can be certain that you will need to replan and change many times, checking ahead to see if and how the next leg should be completed, where each leg is the length of the certainty distance ahead. As soon as new facts come to light, the next leg starts, so the journey is an almost infinite number of checks, with adjustments at the start of one. That is the nature of driving, although I don't think of it like that when I am driving. It is tiring if you experience a lot of 'short' certainty distances, so one design goal provides long distances of certainty. This minimises change and reduces planning, stress and effort.
Drivers apply a set of filters at the start of each leg to create a plan that is certain
enough to give a very good chance of success. One way to increase certainty distances is to ask drivers to conform to a reliable pattern of driving that other drivers can
count on when planning. The quality of the filters, the planning abilities and the objective function (certain enough?) vary greatly from driver to driver, and that is a problem - behavioural consistency - that is partially addressed by speed limits, even though they are not rationalised that way.
The big question on this site is whether to
ask drivers to conform to the limits, or to
compel them to. Or, rephrased, if drivers are not compelled to obey speed limits, would they be tempted ignore them, as they have in the past?