Gatsobait wrote:
basingwerk wrote:
I'm not discounting (close shaves) - I'm saying it cannot be captured on record today. Crashes, on the other hand, are rarer, and more serious, they can (and are) assessed and logged.
I know, but if we do no more than that we're failing to take the next step just because it looks difficult.
It make no odds – the thing is that a UNIT for road safety is established. Right now, actuaries in insurance companies are really making these calculations of risk and they set their rates based on that, so that they get more in premiums than they are likely to pay out in costs. That means they have to assess each drivers MDBDF (or something similar) and work out the costs based on that, and add profits to arrive at the figure. You would think that people with high insurance costs would twig that the reason behind it is their short MDBDF, but they don’t. They put it down to a rip off. On the other hand, people (like me) who get full comp with two drivers for under £150
do recognise that it is due to their
long MDBDF! One explanation is that people with long MDBDFs are smarter than people with short MDBDFs (!), which is no surprise if you think about it!!!
Gatsobait wrote:
Nope, can't see (benefit of MDBDF) at all I'm afraid. It just includes the effects of errors where luck ran out (or whatever). We're still no nearer to knowing whether the errors that lead up to a certain crash are made by the driver(s) involved one a week, once a month, once a year, or whether the situation is so unique it can't reasonably be expected to recur.
That’s right, but you are confused because you think I mean that MDBDF relates to real-world accidents, but it doesn’t. MDBDF relates to the
chance of a real-world accident, which is proportional (I expect) to the number of near misses – they are different units for the same thing (in statistical terms). It is a notional value – after you die, the actual number of crashes you had in your life could be used to compute your Actual Distance Between Disastrous Failures, but a fat lot of good that would do for you!
Gatsobait wrote:
Nor does it tell us a thing about whether one driver involved in a crash is making other errors that might lead them to crash again in a couple of weeks if their luck remains bad.
The assumption is that a driver with a short MDBDF is more likely to crash soon than a driver with a long MDBDF. The fact that the driver has observed ‘characteristics’ that gives him a short MDBDF (convictions, age, locality, sex, past history, car-type, income, emergency-stop-count, etc.) predict that he won’t last long. If the MDBDF turns out (after you are dead) to be inaccurate, then the inferences drawn from the observed ‘characteristics’ were false.
But of course, a coarse MDBDF for the whole driving population is easy to find – take the number of miles driven by us all, and divide it by the number of serious injuries. It is exactly what SafeSpeed has been doing with his graphs all along to determine the safety of our roads – he just has omitted to give it a Unit (MDBDF). So we all have a global MDBDF right now anyway – it is 10 million miles! So, on average, we could each drive for many lifetimes without seriously hurting anyone, yet collectively kill or badly injure 50,000 people a year!
The idea behind MDBDF is to work it out for smaller groups, though. That is more difficult, and needs a lot of data.
Gatsobait wrote:
Anything that can be used as a driver aid, fine provided we don't get to the point that the dashboard looks like it belongs to Concorde. Any tale telling devices I am resolutely opposed to.
Then we will never get the data to work out MDBDFs for various types of driver, because people like you won’t let the data flow. Perhaps you are right, and we are stuck with coarser measures, like cameras, humps etc!