Rear-end cut crashes in half with collision, braking tech

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WASHINGTON — Front-to-rear crashes were slashed by about half when the striking vehicle was equipped with forward-collision warning and automatic emergency braking, according to a new study from a partnership between the U.S. Department of Transportation and several automakers.

The Partnership for Analytics Research in Traffic Safety on Tuesday released the results of what it called “the largest government-automaker study to date” exploring the real-world effectiveness of advanced driver-assistance systems in passenger vehicles.

The group, formed in 2018, is a voluntary partnership between the Transportation Department and automakers such as General Motors, Honda, Mazda, Nissan, Stellantis and Toyota.

Ford Motor Co. also has joined the partnership and its vehicle models will be incorporated into future studies, the group noted.

Tesla Inc., whose Autopilot driver-assist system is under federal investigation, is not part of the group.

The study — conducted by Mitre Corp., a nonprofit group that operates the partnership as an independent third party — comes as automakers add more advanced driver-assistance features to their vehicles and as NHTSA collects data on crashes linked to those technologies.

“These emerging technologies can substantially reduce the number of crashes and improve safety outcomes,” said Tim Czapp, industry co-chair of the partnership’s governance board and a senior manager at Stellantis. “Demonstrating industry’s proactive commitment, [automatic emergency braking] is approaching standard deployment and with real-world effectiveness is helping mitigate injuries and lives lost.”

In addition to forward-collision warning and automatic emergency braking — including those with pedestrian detection — the group assessed lane-departure warning, lane-keeping assistance and lane-centering assistance.

The study relied on vehicle equipment data provided by participating automakers for 47 million light-duty vehicles from the 2015-20 model years, and data provided by NHTSA from 12 million police-reported crashes across 13 states.

Overall, the study found that driver-assist features such as forward-collision warning and automatic emergency braking provide “substantial safety benefits across a variety of situations,” while others such as lane-departure warning and lane-keeping assistance provide “some benefit.”

Features such as automatic emergency braking with pedestrian detection require “more data to make estimates of effectiveness,” according to the findings.

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