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Human Factors in Traffic Safety for Highway and Traffic Engineers [Minkštas viršelis]

(Virginia Department of Transportation, University of Texas at Austin, USA)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 330 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 450 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Jul-2025
  • Leidėjas: Elsevier - Health Sciences Division
  • ISBN-10: 0443404275
  • ISBN-13: 9780443404276
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 330 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 450 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Jul-2025
  • Leidėjas: Elsevier - Health Sciences Division
  • ISBN-10: 0443404275
  • ISBN-13: 9780443404276
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Human Factors in Traffic Safety for Highway and Traffic Engineers provides human factors principles and findings to allow nonexperts to consider the road user’s capabilities and limitations more effectively into the practice of design, operations, and safety. It provides data and insights on the needs, capabilities, and limitations of road users, including perception and effects of visual demands, cognition, and influence of expectations on driving behavior. It bridges the gap between human factors research and practical application, presenting complex psychological insights in an accessible manner.
This book begins with Part 1 explaining the significance of the traffic safety problem and giving an overview of the importance of human factors in highway design and traffic engineering. Part 2 focuses on driver information perception and processing, including perception of depth and speed, driver’s visual search, how road users search for information, and how mental and information load affects drivers’ performance. Part 3 provides results of investigations of traffic crash causation and reviews major driver errors. Part 4 then describes key principles of road users’ considerations during highway design and traffic operation. Finally, Part 5 focuses on safety analysis and assessment and describes in detail the existing methods to evaluate human factors during safety assessments.
This is a valuable resource for professionals in highway and traffic engineering, researchers, policymakers, urban planners, and students to understand how human factors contribute to traffic incidents and how to mitigate these through design and operational strategies.
Part
1. Highway Safety Problem Overview
Chapter
1. Traffic Crashes in the U.S.A
Chapter
2. National Strategies for Traffic Safety Improvements
Chapter
3. Human Factors Overview and Relations to Highway Design and Traffic
Control

Part
2. Driver Information Perception and Processing
Chapter
4. Human Sensory and Perceptual System
Chapter
5. Driving-Related Visual Functions
Chapter
6. Drivers Perception of Depth and Motion
Chapter
7. Drivers Visual Search
Chapter
8. Driver Information Processing, Attention, and Mental Workload
Chapter
9. Driver Information Load

Part
3. Traffic Crashes Causation
Chapter
10. Overview of Traffic Crash Causes
Chapter
11. Driver-Related Crash Associated Factors
Chapter
12. Driver Fatigue
Chapter
13. Major Crash Types Contributory Factors

Part
4. Road Users and Engineering Design
Chapter
14. Positive Design Guide.
Chapter
15. Expectancy.
Chapter
16. Self-Explaining Roads.
Chapter
17. Human Factors Key Requirements for Safe Road System Design.

Part
5. Traffic Safety Evaluation
Chapter
18. Overview of the Safety Assessment Techniques
Chapter
19. Risk Factors Identification
Chapter
20. Road Safety Evaluation Based on Human Factors

References
Appendices
Appendix A. Look-Up Tables of Information Load Values for Typical Signs
Appendix B. Traffic Conflict Techniques for Safety and Operations.
Observers Manual
Appendix C. Operating Speed Equations
Appendix D. Prompt List Existing Road Audit
Appendix E. PIARC Road Safety Evaluation Based on Human Factors Method
Appendix F. Modified Method for Road Safety Evaluation Based on Human
Factors. Samples of Safety Assessments
Dr. Alexei Tsyganov is a former Research Scientist at the University of Texas at Austin and a Strategic Highway Safety Engineer with the Virginia Department of Transportation. He has been investigating human factors in traffic safety for over 40 years. He has conducted numerous research projects, serving as the principal investigator in 30 studies. He has more than 100 peer-reviewed scientific publications in multiple countries. Major results of his studies have been included in highway design manuals of several European countries, Federal Highway Administrations Crash Modification Factors Clearinghouse and several other synthesis reports.