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Enhancing Safety and Operations at Complex Interchanges with Improved Signing, Markings, and Integrated Geometry
Steve Jackson
Bryan Katz
Scott Kuznicki
Erin Kissner
Nicholas Kehoe
Sheryl Miller
出版
United States Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration
, 2018
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=Tsm9uQEACAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
The purpose of this study was to develop recommendations for signing, delineation, and geometric design that will reduce workloads at critical points approaching interchanges that exhibit a high degree of complexity. In the development of these recommendations, the following activities were completed: identification of attributes influencing interchange complexity; evaluation of current geometric design, signing, and marking practices; a simulator study investigating driver behavior at different interchange layouts; and a field study investigating real-world driver behavior at complex interchanges. This report details the process and outcomes of these activities to develop key findings with regard to traffic control devices, pavement markings, and geometric design being implemented across the country. Six categories of recommendations ("treatments") were identified and discussed. Each treatment is the result of understanding the interrelationships of various attributes within each research topic and the application of those relationships to practice outcomes. The report describes each treatment with examples of undesirable practices as well as anticipated and observed outcomes, provides existing design guidelines with a general perspective on implementations in multiple jurisdictions, outlines the primary principles of the concept, provides application examples, provides specific recommendations to address undesirable practices, and summarizes the breadth and depth of implementation options