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Title:

HIGH-VISIBILITY CLOTHING FOR DAYTIME USE IN WORK ZONES

Accession Number:

00740701

Record Type:

Component

Availability:

Transportation Research Board Business Office

500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001 United States

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Order URL: http://worldcat.org/isbn/0309061563

Abstract:

High-visibility safety clothing serves an important role in protection of personnel in highway construction. A total of 236 fatalities in highway and street construction were reported for 1992-1993 by the Laborers' Health and Safety Fund of North America, which puts the fatality rate of private-industry highway construction at twice that of other private-industry construction. A field study was conducted to determine the most conspicuous color of safety clothing for daytime use in the work zone. The 11 colors studied included 8 fluorescent (Fl) colors (green, yellow-green, yellow, yellow-orange, red-orange, a combination of red-orange with yellow-green, red mesh over white background, and pink), two nonfluorescent colors (yellow and orange), and one semifluorescent color (yellow). Subjects were required to look through a shutter, which opened for 300 msec at 30.5-m intervals, as the researcher drove 32 km/hr toward a work zone. Subjects were instructed to indicate the point at which they first identified safety clothing in the scene. These detection distances were recorded for each color in each of four work zones. Fl red-orange was found to have the highest mean detection distance, and it was significantly different from every color except the Fl red mesh, Fl yellow-green, and Fl red-orange/Fl yellow-green combination. Each of these colors is recommended for use in safety garments with the exception of Fl red mesh, because the mesh may not perform well if worn over darker clothing.

Supplemental Notes:

This paper appears in Transportation Research Record No. 1585, Safety and Management in Maintenance and Construction Operations.

Language:

English

Corporate Authors:

Transportation Research Board

500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001 United States

Authors:

Turner, J D
Simmons, C J
Graham, J R

Pagination:

p. 1-8

Publication Date:

1997

Serial:

Transportation Research Record

Issue Number: 1585
Publisher: Transportation Research Board
ISSN: 0361-1981

ISBN:

0309061563

Features:

Figures (3) ; References (14) ; Tables (3)

Old TRIS Terms:

Subject Areas:

Highways; Maintenance and Preservation; Research; Safety and Human Factors; I60: Maintenance; I81: Accident Statistics

Files:

TRIS, TRB, ATRI

Created Date:

Sep 18 1997 12:00AM

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