Paper
20 May 1973 Vehicle Lighting System - Four Steps In Glare Reduction
D. A. Schreuder
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 0034, Solving Problems in Automotive Safety Engineering and Biomechanics with Optical Instrumentation; (1973) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.953653
Event: Optical Instrumentation: A Problem Solving Tool in Automotive Safety Engineering and Bio-Mechanics, 1972, Detroit, United States
Abstract
At night, car driving requires as much - or perhaps even more - visual information as driving during day-time. The fact that generally speaking the night-time accident rates are some three times as high as the corresponding day-time rates must be at least partially contributed to the lack of visual information at night (swot/ 1969), more likely so if the fact is taken into account that on roads with good overhead street lighting the accidents are some 30% lower than on unlit or poorly lit roads, where car-drivers have to rely on their headlamps (OECD 1971, Box 1971, Cornwell and Mackay 1972). With present-day technology, driving a car involves the driver as an active element, and it can be done only when a large amount of visual information is presented. Details regarding the driving task may be found elsewhere (Anon 1971, Asmussen 1972), together with details regarding the role therein of transport lighting (Schreuder 1970a, 1971). For the present discussion, however, it is enough to summarize this task in two sub-tasks: primo following the road and secundo avoiding obstacles. As indicated, at day and with good overhead lighting these sub-tasks can be performed reasonably well; major problems, however, arise when vehicles have to proceed on unlit roads. They can be related to the general lighting requirements that can be described as: sufficient high and uniform road luminance, glare restriction, and visual guidance (Schreuder 1970b).
© (1973) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
D. A. Schreuder "Vehicle Lighting System - Four Steps In Glare Reduction", Proc. SPIE 0034, Solving Problems in Automotive Safety Engineering and Biomechanics with Optical Instrumentation, (20 May 1973); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.953653
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Roads

Lamps

Light sources and illumination

Headlamps

Information visualization

Visualization

Safety

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