More International Resources Resources
Preparing for the Future of Transportation: Automated Vehicles 3.0
Source: US Department of Transportation (USDOT)
Provides guidance for AVs and multimodal automation with strategies for integration and to address existing barriers to safety innovation.
Read More >Source: American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators
Serves as a clearinghouse of information with resources from researchers, regulators, and the media.
Read More >Planning for Walking and Cycling in an Autonomous-Vehicle Future
Source: Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives
Explores how connected and automated vehicles may affect pedestrian and bicyclist safety as well as local infrastructure and land use decisions.
Read More >Automated Vehicles and Pedestrian Safety: Exploring the Promise and Limits of Pedestrian Detection
Source: American Journal of Preventive Medicine
Analyzes nearly 5,000 pedestrian fatalities and virtually reconstructs scenarios to model how sensor technology, like the kind currently being tested on automated vehicles, would or would not have changed the outcomes.
Read More >Source: Pedestrian and Bicycle Information Center (PBIC) and Virginia Tech Transportation Institute
Provides a foundation and orientation for students and practitioners to learn more and join the conversation about the advancement of AVs and the safety and mobility for all road users.
Read More >Source: US Access Board
Issues a final rule on accessibility guidelines for pedestrian facilities in the public right-of-way, including notable changes and training resources.
Read More >Source: Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS)
Assist state DOTs in developing ADA Transition Plans and managing accessibility inventories.
Read More >Source: Federal Highway Administration (FHWA)
Helps State and local transportation departments understand responsibilities under ADA and Section 504.
Read More >Source: Easterseals
Provides training and technical assistance on accessible transportation issues.
Read More >Source: Pedestrian and Bicycle Information Center (PBIC)
Describes how a quick-build project in Detroit, Michigan, improved safety for students walking to school by reducing the turning radius at a key crossing and adding community murals.
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