GreenShed wrote:
Ah yes, the Swiss...
How absolutely random!
Run out of arguments have you, RSS man? That's a bit pathetic, especially for someone of your supposed stature!
Why not tell us who
you are?
viewtopic.php?p=218033#p218033viewtopic.php?p=218459#p218459How many multiple personas have you had on various forums? I can think of another three personas that you have had on this one alone...
Getting back on track:
GreenShed wrote:
The mean after treatment is now much lower than the mean before treatment and below the long term trend at most fixed sites.
Thanks to the illusion of RTTM (you hadn't actually accounted for this effect with your weasel wording)
GreenShed wrote:
the speed of traffic is reduced
A euphemism for "forcing adverse reactions"
GreenShed wrote:
How can the benefit, some of it be attributed to speed management and not other effects?
More errors.
You conveniently forget the other, even more significant, confounding factor of "bias on selection". This is independent, and additional to, RTTM (and long-term effects).
In short, this is the effect of other safety measures having been placed at speed camera sites such that the accident rate
regresses to below the previous mean.
'Bias on Selection' – the application of an external influence so making the 'scheme' (the camera) falsely appear to be more effective than it actually is.(I don't know what the technical name is so I coined my own.)When a speed camera is erected alongside another new road safety measure, like a pedestrian barrier/crossing, central reservation, junction re-layout, etc, what do you think gets credited for any subsequent reduction in accident rate? Both, or just the "camera site"? Think about that – that’s sneaky huh?
To explain: The illusion of Bias On Selection will occur when considering the effectiveness of one specific treatment at a site where multiple remedial treatments were also applied. For example, the addition of a pedestrian crossing, or changing the layout of a junction, pedestrian crossings or barriers, etc, at a camera site, will result with an additional reduction of KSI beyond that caused by the camera (if any).
Urban sites will often have multiple measures applied to a problem area. It is possible for any of these other (genuine) treatments to be placed at camera sites. TRL agree with me: "
The treatment might be one of many applied at the same scheme. " (a fantastic document that demolishes the case for cameras).
The use of those other genuine safety measures within camera sites would actually be hiding any negative effect from speed cameras, even though there is a substantial KSI reduction at the sites following installation of the cameras (even when accounting for RTTM and trends), and this is exactly what we observe.
One or more of these treatments could have a positive effect on safety. However, it is possible that one of these treatments isn’t giving any benefit, or may even be having a negative effect, yet together with the genuine treatments they yields an overall net KSI reduction, thus effectively hiding the negative impact of the bad treatment.
No figures exist for the effectiveness of the described other measures, that in itself should be ringing alarm bells – yes?
So '
bias on selection' is an additional illusion of false effectiveness, independent of statistical RTTM – yes?
If you deny that, then you don't understand it.I've beaten you on this
again, and
again, and
again, and
again. You never responded to any of those.