Yes
Not Sure
No
"So if you meet me, have some sympathy, have some courtesy, have some taste ..."
One thing that was impressed on me when I was learning to write research papers was to NEVER cite any part of a paper wher the conclusions contained the words 'might, may, could' etc. As these all point to inconclusive results and results cannot be relied on.
Having read the paper cited by the OP (BMJ, doi:10.1136/bmj.37984.574757.EE (published 2 February 2004)) I can find so much wrong with the multivariate analysis that I'm suprised it passed peer review. There are so many confounding factors that affect the results (eg age,riding experience, lack of licence etc), that unless these factors are removed from the analysis then no conclusions can be made.
Time to ride
Great minds discuss ideas, average minds discuss events, small minds discuss people. --- Unknown sage
With the Gorilla test that you mentioned in a previous post, they said only 50% got it right, I didn't know it was as high as 96.9% (can you show me where got the statistics from?)
To be honest, I'm at a loss of what could be done to make New Zealand roads safer without violating rights. There are some things that I personally think that are written in the road code that are disasters waiting to happen in practice such as the 2 second rule (considering reaction times and sense of timing in general vary from person to person).
Don't think about the cost of change, think about the net cost. Sharing the roads with wombles who might kill me or somebody I know through their ineptitude seems like a violation of rights, and a bigger one than a periodic competency test. In saying that, the way TPTB usually do things, it would end up being a piss easy test that cost heaps and achieved little.
"A shark on whiskey is mighty risky, but a shark on beer is a beer engineer" - Tad Ghostal
I can but it costs money instead of making it. Separate traffic force, no speed or red light cameras, cops on the street picking up actual infringements that are indicators of lack of concern about the use of the road, earning their donut quota. A non-indicator is often a self centered person that will run your off the road rather than share the road with you. Can't be bothered writing a book on lost cause.
I don't see your problem with the 2 second advice, it only really covers the reaction time and it takes less than 2 seconds to react. If your reactions aren't fast enough there is no rule preventing you from allowing more. Anyhow the 2 second thing is not the rule it is only a piece of helpful advice.
Great minds discuss ideas, average minds discuss events, small minds discuss people. --- Unknown sage
One thing that surprised me about that study as well is they let the control group decide weather to wear high-viz or not. It strikes me the control group should be told what to wear. Otherwise you immediately get the results affected by people's personal opinions on the subject. E,g. People who are very risk adverse might be involved in less accidents and choose to use high-viz. Doing it the way they did you can't tell if the results are now because of the persons attitude or their clothing.
"A shark on whiskey is mighty risky, but a shark on beer is a beer engineer" - Tad Ghostal
Why is there a 'not sure' option on the poll? there is no grey area, they either are, or they are not....idiots.
The various studies have pretty much all failed to discern any difference in risk between those wearing Hi-Viz apparel and those not. In the face of such overwhelming evidence you'd be an idiot to stipulate anything but "No, it doesn't make any difference". Unless you have fresh, qualified and peer reviewed evidence to the contrary.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks