Review of Nevada's Rural Intersection Crashes: Application of Methodology for
Identifying Intersections for Intersection Decision Support
Craig Shankwitz, Howard Preston, Max Donath and Richard Storm
August 2008
2008-31
http://www.lrrb.org/pdf/200831.pdf (0.7MB)
The Intersection Decision Support (IDS) research project is sponsored by a consortium of states (Minnesota,
California, and Virginia) and the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) whose objective is to improve
intersection safety. The Minnesota team’s focus is to develop a better understanding of the causes of crashes at
rural unsignalized intersections and then develop a technology solution to address the cause(s).
In the original study, a review of Minnesota’s rural crash records and of past research identified poor driver gap
selection as a major contributing cause of rural intersection crashes. Consequently, the design of the rural IDS
technology has focused on enhancing the driver's ability to successfully negotiate rural intersections by
communicating information about the available gaps in the traffic stream to the driver.
In order to develop an IDS technology that has the potential to be nationally deployed, the regional differences at
rural intersections must first be understood. Only then can a universal solution be designed and evaluated. To
achieve this goal of national consensus and deployment, the University of Minnesota and the Minnesota
Department of Transportation initiated a State Pooled Fund study, in which nine states are cooperating in
intersection-crash research. This report documents the crash analysis phase of the pooled fund study for the State
of Nevada.
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