In-Car Technologies Preventing Crashes, IIHS Research Shows

"This is the first evidence that lane departure warning is working to prevent crashes of passenger vehicles on U.S. roads," said Jessica Cicchino, IIHS vice president of research. "Given the large number of fatal crashes that involve unintentional lane departures, technology aimed at preventing them has the potential to save a lot of lives."

Lane departure warning technology is preventing crashes on U.S. roads, research from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety shows, and another study shows that blind spot detection also is helping to prevent lane-change crashes. These are the latest in a series by Jessica Cicchino, IIHS vice president for research, that evaluates different crash avoidance features by looking at data from police-reported crashes.

Because police reports include information on the circumstances of a crash, it's possible to look specifically at the types of crashes that particular technologies are designed to address, rather than just looking at crash rates generally. Her previous studies found front crash prevention with autobrake cuts the rate of front-to-rear crashes in half and rear-view cameras can prevent about one in six backing crashes.

One of the new studies finds lane departure warning lowers rates of single-vehicle, sideswipe, and head-on crashes of all severities by 11 percent and lowers the rates of injury crashes of the same types by 21 percent. (This means if all passenger vehicles had been equipped with lane departure warning, nearly 85,000 police-reported crashes and more than 55,000 injuries would have been prevented in 2015, according to IIHS.)

It reported that "a simpler analysis that didn't account for driver demographics found that lane departure warning cut the fatal crash rate 86 percent. There weren't enough fatal crashes to include them in a statistical model that controlled for demographics. In the simpler analysis, the rate of all crashes was 18 percent lower for vehicles equipped with the feature, and the rate of injury crashes was 24 percent lower."

"This is the first evidence that lane departure warning is working to prevent crashes of passenger vehicles on U.S. roads," Cicchino said. "Given the large number of fatal crashes that involve unintentional lane departures, technology aimed at preventing them has the potential to save a lot of lives."

The new study included vehicles with optional lane departure warning from six manufacturers: General Motors, Honda, Mazda, Mercedes-Benz, Subaru, and Volvo. The automakers provided information about the presence of optional features on specific vehicles by vehicle identification number (VIN), and researchers used 2009-15 crash data from states that provided VINs of the crash-involved vehicles, making it possible to identify the vehicles and determine whether they had lane departure warning. IIHS said Cicchino used the same method to examine blind spot detection systems, which provide a visual alert when an adjacent vehicle is in the driver's blind spot. In this case, she focused on crashes in which the vehicles were changing lanes or merging; Fiat Chrysler, General Motors, Honda, Mazda, Mercedes-Benz, and Volvo vehicles were included.

Controlling for other factors that can affect crash risk, blind spot detection lowered the rate of all lane-change crashes by 14 percent and the rate of lane-change crashes with injuries by 23 percent. "Blind spot detection systems work by providing additional information to the driver. It's still up to the driver to pay attention to that information and use it to make decisions," Cicchino said. "That said, if every passenger vehicle on the road were equipped with blind spot detection as effective as the systems we studied, about 50,000 police-reported crashes a year could be prevented."

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