Accident Analysis and Prevention 145 (2020) 105663 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Accident Analysis and Prevention journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/aap From Research to Practice – An Introduction to the Special Issue 1,⁎ Ezra Hauer 1 2 2 , Paul Jovanis T University of Toronto, Canada Penn State University, United States “In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is.” Yogi Berra The role of research on road safety is to produce trustworthy information which, if used, makes for better practice – better policy making, regulation, planning, road design, and traffic management. But what if the information produced is not trustworthy, what if credible findings are not used? Do we have a problem? What can be done about it? These are some of the questions raised in the lead paper (Hauer, 2019a). We thought that the relationship between road safety research and practice should be discussed from a variety of perspectives and this led to the idea of a special issue. It is our hope that the reader will find the contributions illuminating, that they will stimulate thought, discussion and, perhaps, engender reform. Practice is the making of decisions and decisions require the exercise of judgment. Inasmuch as these decisions influence the frequency and severity of crashes one would like this judgment to be informed by an evidence-based anticipation of their likely safety consequences; one would to like to have confidence that, in their judgment, professionals know how to balance safety against cost and mobility; that they know how, as is required, to make road safety paramount. Hauer (2019b) argues that neither the training nor the experience of transportation engineers endow them with the requisite knowledge and ability. One of the difficulties in the exercise of judgment are the complexities of behavioral adaptation. What is known about it? When can we anticipate the safety effect of interventions and when not? Smiley and Rudin-Brown (2020) document the ubiquitous nature of behavioral adaptation and describe how drivers change the way they drive in response to various interventions. Their goal is to lay out the breadth of situations in which behavioral adaptation can be expected to occur, to describe the (generally) unintended changes that occur in various aspects of driver performance, and to identify countermeasure characteristics that are likely to lead to adaptive behavior. Another difficulty is the need to trade road user safety against cost, time and other consequences. Elvik (2019) argues, realistically, that ideals like Vision Zero or Sustainable Safety are inspirational ideas, not tools for policy analysis, that the making trade-offs is unavoidable. Can cost-benefit analysis guide us to get the balance right? On this, after a ⁎ Corresponding author. E-mail address: ezra.hauer@utoronto.ca (E. Hauer). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aap.2020.105663 Available online 31 August 2020 0001-4575/ © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. thorough discussion of its conceptual foundations and main assumptions Elvik concludes that “cost-benefit analysis cannot answer the main questions it was designed to answer”. If so, what can? There are other formal tools of policy analysis (e.g. Multicriterion Analysis) but these seem to suffer from similar ignominies. Perhaps more promising are attempts to state all impacts of road safety measures in terms of changes in human longevity and health. The ethical dimensions of engineering roads and traffic are the subject of Pritchard’s (2019) paper. For the philosopher the question is not only one of quantification (how many lives and injuries, how many dollars, how much time will be lost, etc.) nor of trade-off (how many hours of delay for one life, etc.). The question is also what are the engineer’s responsibilities, how to live up to the first canon of the engineer’s code of ethics (to hold safety paramount), what about the feeling of security, or, generally, which consequences need to be considered, why does the passage of time matter, how to recognize the limitations of one’s own profession and what does that mean for the need to partner with other professions? The questions are posed and illustrated by down-to-earth examples. Ethics are also the subject of the paper by Haghighattalab et al. (2019). After an extensive review the authors conclude that absence of ethical considerations is a gap in the crash analysis models. The authors suggest that ethical control be implemented at three levels: comprehensive policymaking, systematic decision-making, and individual employee performance. Mohan (2019) elevates the question of the professional’s responsibility to a higher level. He tackles the broader topic of rights and obligations and begins by telling three commonplace stories. An elderly gentlemen in India was dragged to his death by a bus; this would not have happened if buses could not move when the door is open. A middle-aged woman in Sweden lost control driving at 170 km/h; she would live if cars could not be driven that fast. A young lady in Uganda was disabled when her moped crashed; she might not be disabled if motorcycle helmet wearing was obligatory. The morals are two. First, that these stories are commonplace should give one pause. Carnage is tolerated in road transport but is not acceptable when we use other man-made products. Second, that such death and injuries are hardly ‘unintentional’ for they could be prevented. That they were not is the result of intent. And so the question is whether road users have the right Accident Analysis and Prevention 145 (2020) 105663 E. Hauer and P. Jovanis to expect the missing prevention and, if so, on whose shoulder rests the obligation to provide it. For, as Mohan shows, solemn words and declarations of right do little if not accompanied by the recognition of obligations; that “at the operational level it is the ‘State’ which has the primary obligation for ensuring the people’s right to road safety.” But, as the lead paper shows, the ‘State’ has interests of its own (budget, publicity, politics) of which the transportation professional in it employ is cognizant when making decisions that affect road user safety. Effective prevention rests on knowledge of causes. The link between crash causes, countermeasures and safety policies is the subject of Shinar’s (2019) contribution. Crash causation studies, and there are many, all tend to conclude that humans and their failures are the cause of 90%-95% of crashes. Is that so? Not necessarily say Shinar. All these studies share on one critical and invalid assumption: the assumption that cause is some kind of error or failure, a deviation from what is considered ‘normal'. But ‘normalcy’ is a fluid concept. Am I ‘distracted’ when I drive and listen to the radio, when I speak to the passenger, when I think about something? Are roads designed to current practice and traffic controls that are in accord with some manual never causes? In examining the link between cause and countermeasure Shinar notes that crashes are not like infectious diseases, where identifying the bacterium or virus is essential for finding prevention measures; that in crash prevention a more fruitful approach is to use causes as clues to environmental or vehicular changes that would eliminate this 'cause', 'kill its breeding ground' so to speak. In his opinion a “more balanced approach to the definition of a cause and to the search for crash countermeasures is needed, and the safe system approach appears to be a most promising one.” One of the environmental causes that Shinar mentions are roads, how they are designed and built. Roads are built to conform to design guidelines. Van Beinum and Wegman (2019) note that during the latest revision of the Dutch motorway design guidelines it became clear that an evidence based-justification for the prescribed ramp spacing and length of weaving segments on Dutch motorways is missing. Data were collected at several on-ramps, off ramps, and weaving segments. The results show that the areas around ramps that are influenced by turbulence are smaller than specified in design manuals. Special journal issues are peculiar creatures. They are both satisfying and disappointing. It is great to have prominent thinkers illumine a subject matter from several perspectives. And yet, much is left in the shadow. Let’s continue and make the research-practice relationship into a well function partnership. References Hauer, E., 2019a. On the relationship between road safety research and the practice of road design and operation. Accident Analysis and Prevention 128, 114–131. Hauer, W., 2019b. Engineering judgment and road safety. Accident Analysis and Prevention 129, 180–189. Mohan, D, 2019. Traffic safety: Rights and obligations. Accident Analysis and Prevention 128, 159–163. Pritchard, MS, 2019. Safety, security, and serviceability in road engineering. Accident Analysis and Prevention 127, 172–176. Haghighattalab, S., Chen, A, Fan, Y, Mohammadi, R, 2019. Engineering ethics within accident analysis models. Accident Analysis and Prevention 129, 119–125. Shinar, D, 2019. Crash causes, countermeasures, and safety policy implications. Accident Analysis and Prevention 125, 224–231. Elvik, R., 2019. How to trade safety against cost, time and other impacts of road safety measures. Accident Analysis and Prevention 127, 150–155. Smiley, A., Rudin-Brown, C, 2020. Drivers adapt – Be prepared for It!. Accident Analysis and Prevention 135, 105370. Van Beinum, A., Wegman, F, 2019. Design guidelines for turbulence in traffic on Dutch motorways. Accident Analysis and Prevention 132, 10528. 2