Two new U.S. studies show that automatic emergency braking can cut the number of rear-end automobile crashes in half, and reduce pickup truck crashes by
A new study has found that tools designed to warn drivers and slow or stop vehicles in emergencies helped reduce crashes by about 50 percent. The study is one of the largest of its kind to examine the effectiveness of such systems.
Two new U.S. studies show that automatic emergency braking can cut the number of rear-end automobile crashes in half, and reduce pickup truck crashes by more than 40%. The studies released Tuesday, one by a government-auto industry partnership and the other by the insurance industry, each used crash data to…