UMTRI-NIST-Tests Crop Tilting A Truck IVBSScar Crop

Reports - Accident Analyses

Using a Virtual Tool to Assess Crash Contributing Factors: Presence of Artificial Lighting Coded by Google Street View and PARs (Stafford, Whetsel, Flannagan, and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-2012-34, December 2012.

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Heavy Trucks, Conspicuity Treatment, and the Decline of Collision Risk in Darkness (Sullivan and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-2011-18, September 2011.

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Benefits of Daytime Running Lights (Sivak and Schoettle), Report No. UMTRI-2011-6, February 2011.

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Headlamps and Pedestrian Injuries (Sivak and Schoettle), Report No. UMTRI-2010-6, November 2010.

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Relationships Between Lighting and Animal-Vehicle Collisions (Sullivan), Report No. UMTRI-2009-35, October 2009.

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Relationships Among Driver Age, Vehicle Cost, and Fatal Nighttime Crashes (Sullivan and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-2009-4, March 2009.

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Trends in Fatal Crashes in Darkness: 1990 to 2006 (Sullivan and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-2008-33, May 2008.

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Mirror Size and Lane-Change Crashes (Sivak, Devonshire, Flannagan, and Reed), Report No. UMTRI-2008-32, May 2008.

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Moon Phases and Nighttime Road Crashes Involving Pedestrians (Sivak, Schoettle, and Tsimhoni), Report No. UMTRI-2007-41, September 2007.

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Truck Mirrors, Fields of View, and Serious Truck Crashes (Blower), Report No. UMTRI-2007-25, June 2007.

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Characteristics of Nighttime Pedestrian Crashes: Implications for Headlighting (Sullivan and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-2007-3, May 2007.

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Mirror-Mounted Turn Signals and Traffic Safety (Sivak, Schoettle, and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-2006-33, November 2006.

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Body-Pillar Vision Obstructions and Lane-Change Crashes (Sivak, Schoettle, Reed, and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-2006-29, September 2006.

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Effects of Dedicated Stop Lamps on Nighttime Rear-End Collisions (Luoma, Sivak, and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-2006-15, May 2006.

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Implications of Fatal and Nonfatal Crashes for Adaptive Headlighting (Sullivan and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-2006-1, April 2006.

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Influence of the Visibility Out of the Vehicle Cabin on Lane-Change Crashes (Sivak, Schoettle, Reed, and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-2005-32, November 2005.

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Further Crash Evidence About the Nighttime Visibility of Trucks (Sullivan), Report No. UMTRI-2005-22, September 2005.

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Visibility and Rear-End Collisions Involving Light Vehicles and Trucks (Sullivan and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-2004-14, June2004.

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A Worldwide Perspective on Future Automobile Lighting (Rumar), Report No. UMTRI-2001-35, November 2001.

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Characteristics of Pedestrian Risk in Darkness (Sullivan and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-2001-33, November 2001.

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Effects of Nonplanar Driver-Side Mirrors on Lane Change Crashes (Luoma, Flannagan, and Sivak), Report No. UMTRI-2000-26, June 2000.

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Assessing the Potential Benefit of Adaptive Headlighting Using Crash Databases (Sullivan and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-99-21, September 1999.

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Are Driver-Side Convex Mirrors Helpful or Harmful? (Schumann, Sivak, and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-96-7, March 1996.

Drivers' Vision, Age, and Gender as Factors in Twilight Road Fatalities
(Owens and Brooks), Report No. UMTRI-95-44, November 1995.

Effects of Driver-Side Mirror Type on Lane-Change Accidents
(Luoma, Sivak, and Flannagan), Report No. UMTRI-94-34, November 1994.

The Role of Reduced Visibility in Nighttime Road Fatalities
(Owens and Sivak), Report No. UMTRI-93-33, November 1993.

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Contact IAP

Michael J. Flannagan portrait

Michael J. Flannagan

E: mjf@umich.edu
P: 734-764-4158
F: 734-764-1221

University of Michigan
Transportation Research Institute
2901 Baxter Rd.
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2150

Human Factors
Room 304