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Meta-Analysis
. 2016 Apr 29;11(4):e0153390.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0153390. eCollection 2016.

Predicting Crashes Using Traffic Offences. A Meta-Analysis that Examines Potential Bias between Self-Report and Archival Data

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Meta-Analysis

Predicting Crashes Using Traffic Offences. A Meta-Analysis that Examines Potential Bias between Self-Report and Archival Data

Peter Barraclough et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Background: Traffic offences have been considered an important predictor of crash involvement, and have often been used as a proxy safety variable for crashes. However the association between crashes and offences has never been meta-analysed and the population effect size never established. Research is yet to determine the extent to which this relationship may be spuriously inflated through systematic measurement error, with obvious implications for researchers endeavouring to accurately identify salient factors predictive of crashes.

Methodology and principal findings: Studies yielding a correlation between crashes and traffic offences were collated and a meta-analysis of 144 effects drawn from 99 road safety studies conducted. Potential impact of factors such as age, time period, crash and offence rates, crash severity and data type, sourced from either self-report surveys or archival records, were considered and discussed. After weighting for sample size, an average correlation of r = .18 was observed over the mean time period of 3.2 years. Evidence emerged suggesting the strength of this correlation is decreasing over time. Stronger correlations between crashes and offences were generally found in studies involving younger drivers. Consistent with common method variance effects, a within country analysis found stronger effect sizes in self-reported data even controlling for crash mean.

Significance: The effectiveness of traffic offences as a proxy for crashes may be limited. Inclusion of elements such as independently validated crash and offence histories or accurate measures of exposure to the road would facilitate a better understanding of the factors that influence crash involvement.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: The entity Empirica does not have a commercial affiliation with the authors as is commonly understood by the term and is best understood as the business name for Anders af Wåhlberg. This commercial affiliation, as such, does not alter the authors’ adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials. There are no issues for any of the study authors in regards to consultancy, patents, products in development, or marketed products in relation to this paper.

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Fig 1. Study selection flow diagram.

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