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Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1

Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

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Page 1: Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

Response Time

Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1

Page 2: Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

What do you think?How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

The average response time for most drivers is about 0.33s.

Page 3: Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

What do you think?How far can you go in 0.33s?

At 30 mph, this is 14 feet.At 60 mph, this is __ feet.

This is BEFORE you try to stop the car.

Page 4: Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?
Page 5: Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

Response TimeWhat factors affect response time?

AlertnessDrugs & alcoholAgeDistractions

Conversations (cell phone and others)Eating & drinkingPutting on make-upRubber necking

Page 6: Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

Highway Statistics – 15-202004:

24 percent of fatally injured drivers aged 15-20 were intoxicated (blood alcohol concentration [BAC] greater than 0.08 percent).

2003: 6.3 percent of licensed drivers,

13.6 percent of all highway fatal crashes. 

Page 7: Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

Highway Statistics – 15-202002:

Crash severity increases with alcohol involvement.2 percent of drivers in property-damage-only crashes had been drinking. 4 percent of young drivers in injury crashes had been drinking. 23 percent of young drivers in fatal crashes had been drinking.~ $40.8 billion = estimated cost of police-reported young driver crashes.

Page 8: Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

Highway Statistics – 15-20Young drivers do only 20 percent of their driving at night, but over half the crash fatalities of adolescent drivers occur during nighttime hours.

The risk of a crash involving a teenage driver increases with each additional teen passenger in the vehicle.

Page 9: Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

Highway Statistics – 15-20Research shows that the cognitive effects of conducting a conversation on a wireless telephone can decrease situational awareness and that wireless telephone use can increase reaction time.

A 2001 study, "Driver Situational Awareness and Carphone Use," reported that drivers engaged in wireless conversations were unaware of traffic movements around them.

Page 10: Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

Average vs. Instantaneous Speed?

Average Speed: Total distance traveled / total time.

Average speed is independent of the path traveled. It does not necessarily reflect your speed at a given moment in time.

Instantaneous Speed: The speed that you are traveling at at a specific moment in time.

Page 11: Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

Observing SpeedSpeed can be observed and represented in a couple of ways.

Motion Diagrams: A strobe representation through pictures of a moving object taken at a specific time interval. Graphs: Speed can be determined through graphical analysis where the distance or velocity of an object may be measured vs. time.

Page 12: Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

Motion DiagramsConstant Speed:

Negative Acceleration:

Positive Acceleration:

Page 13: Response Time Transportation: Ch. 1, Act. 1. What do you think? How fast do you think you would be able to respond to an emergency situation on the road?

Graphical Anaysis

Time

Dis

tanc

e or

Vel

ocit

y