• Tue. Jul 2nd, 2024

Survey shows majority of US drivers support the implementation of anti-speeding technology in vehicles

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Jun 16, 2024

New vehicles were spotted in a parking lot at the Port of Richmond, located at the bay of San Francisco, California on June 8, 2023. A survey conducted by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety revealed that more than 60% of drivers in the United States would support having their vehicles provide audible and visual warnings if they exceeded the posted speed limit.

The IIHS surveyed 1,802 drivers to gather insights on their opinions regarding intelligent speed assistance systems (ISA). Over-speeding has been a contributing factor in over a quarter of U.S. traffic fatalities, resulting in more than 12,000 deaths in 2022.

Despite this, around half of the surveyed drivers admitted to driving at least 15 mph over the speed limit in the past month, as reported by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety. In the European Union, starting next month, all new vehicles will be required to be equipped with ISA systems.

ISA technologies utilize speed sign-recognition video cameras and GPS-linked speed limit data to inform drivers of the current speed limit and alert them if they are exceeding it. The survey results indicated that over 80% of drivers would like a feature displaying the current speed limit, and more than 70% preferred an unobtrusive tone to sound when the speed limit changes.

Additionally, about half of the drivers surveyed expressed willingness to have a vehicle technology that makes it harder to press the accelerator pedal or automatically restricts speed. IIHS senior research scientist Ian Reagan noted that current technologies could effectively prevent speeding and eliminate speeding tickets but expressed concern about recent trends in vehicle automation that allow drivers to exceed speed limits.

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