Summary
The National Motor Vehicle Crash Causation Survey (NMVCCS), conducted
from 2005 to 2007, was aimed at collecting on-scene information about the events
and associated factors leading up to crashes involving light vehicles.
Several facets of crash occurrence were investigated during data
collection, namely the pre- crash movement, critical pre-crash event, critical reason,
and the associated factors.
A weighted sample of 5,470 crashes was investigated over a period
of two and a half years, which represents an estimated 2,189,000 crashes nationwide.
About 4,031,000 vehicles, 3,945,000 drivers, and 1,982,000 passengers
were estimated to have been involved in these crashes.
The critical reason, which is the last event in the crash causal
chain, was assigned to the driver in 94 percent (±2.2%)† of the crashes.
In about 2 percent (±0.7%) of the crashes, the critical reason
was assigned to a vehicle component’s failure or degradation, and in 2 percent (±1.3%)
of crashes, it was attributed to the environment (slick roads, weather, etc.).
Among an estimated 2,046,000 drivers who were assigned critical
reasons, recognition errors accounted for about 41 percent (±2.1%), decision errors
33 percent (±3.7%), and performance errors 11 percent (±2.7%) of the crashes.