Skip to main content

NSW university launches high-tech safety study

Road experts led by Australia’s University of New South Wales (NSW) professor Mike Regan are to conduct what is said to be the most thorough traffic safety study in Australian history. Cameras inside and outside cars will film 400 volunteers in Victoria and New South Wales in an effort to analyse the cause of crashes and change driver education and road safety campaigns. The cameras will record how drivers behaved and reacted in ''real world'' situations. John Wall, manager of road safety technology with N
April 16, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Road experts led by Australia’s University of New South Wales (NSW) professor Mike Regan are to conduct what is said to be the most thorough traffic safety study in Australian history.

Cameras inside and outside cars will film 400 volunteers in Victoria and New South Wales in an effort to analyse the cause of crashes and change driver education and road safety campaigns.  The cameras will record how drivers behaved and reacted in ''real world'' situations.

John Wall, manager of road safety technology with NSW 6722 Roads and Maritime Services, said the study was unlike any other done in Australia.

''It's a little bit like reality TV for road safety researchers,'' he said. The cameras would capture what happened in real crashes and gather valuable data, he said.

A similar study by the 324 US Department of Transportation and 5593 Virginia Tech Transportation Institute, involving 241 drivers, surprised authorities by showing that eighty per cent of collisions were caused by the situation or driver inattention. The researchers believed driver distraction was the main cause of accidents.

Professor Regan said the Australian study would look closely at drivers not paying adequate attention. ''That's the biggest contributing factor we know of for crashes,'' he said.

Professor Regan's team will look for a wide spectrum of volunteers, including drivers with disabilities and people who use prescription medication.  The study will have an even split between urban and rural users in NSW and Victoria.

Two pilot vehicles are already on the road, calibrating sensors that will be used when the study starts next year.

A Mobileye safety system developed by collision avoidance systems manufacturer will use a combination of radar and camera sensors to record potential collisions of a type not recorded in Australia.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Australia and New Zealand opt for Redflex speed enforcement
    September 25, 2014
    Australian enforcement company Redflex has scooped two major orders in the Antipodes. RedflexPoint-to-point cameras are now providing average speed enforcement on two major carriageways leading into the city of Adelaide, South Australia; in both directions on the 13km stretch of the two-lane Dukes Highway, with a further two on 51km of the dual carriageway Port Wakefield Road. The cameras installed on Dukes Highway not only monitor traffic in both directions on the two-lane road, they are capture images
  • Silicon Valley comes to Parma
    July 13, 2015
    VisLab, a spin-off of the University of Parma, Italy, has been acquired by US image processing systems developer Ambarella for US$30 million. VisLab, founded in 2009 and managed by Alberto Broggi, professor of the Department of Information Engineering, specialises in computer vision software, particularly for automotive applications. The company has won several awards for its research and for its challenges such as the 15,000 kilometres autonomous vehicle driving test from Parma to Shanghai in 2010.
  • Ford teams up with MIT and Stanford on automated driving
    January 24, 2014
    Building on the automated Ford Fusion Hybrid research vehicle unveiled last month, Ford is announcing new projects with Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Stanford University to research and develop solutions to some of the technical challenges surrounding automated driving. Automated driving is a key component of Ford’s Blueprint for Mobility, which outlines what transportation will look like in 2025 and beyond, along with the technologies, business models and partnerships needed to get the
  • High-mileage drivers more dismissive value of speed cameras, says survey
    July 27, 2015
    High-mileage drivers are more likely than any other type of road user to think speed cameras have ‘little or no influence’ in reducing the numbers of road casualties in the UK, according to a white paper issued by the Institute of Advanced Motorists’ (IAM) Drive and Survive division. The paper, Speed Cameras – The Views of High Mileage Drivers, also found 28 per cent of high-mileage drivers have a negative view of speed cameras – 10 per cent more than other drivers. It also found that more than half o