Standard Practice for Highway Traffic Monitoring Truth-in-Data
Importancia y uso:
4.1 There are general references to the principle of truth-in-data as found in Guide E2259 and Practice E2667. While these references are helpful, without clarification, differences occur within agencies over time as well as among agencies in how truth-in-data is implemented. In the absence of a standard practice for truth-in-data, documentation in some governmental agencies is neither comprehensive nor consistent. For some organizations, truth-in-data is an exception to common practice and occurs only in response to a specific request to understand a specific traffic data set or summary statistic from a traffic data set. This practice provides a consistent approach to truth-in-data implementation.
4.1.1 Traffic Monitoring Stages—Traffic monitoring truth-in-data describes how base data are treated at each traffic monitoring stage from field data collection through evaluation, acceptance, summarization, and reporting.
4.1.2 Benefits—Truth in data provides a means of addressing if and how missing or questionable data are modified as part of data acceptance and use. The benefit arises from understanding what data assumptions or adjustment factors, if any, were applied to reported traffic summary statistics. If an adjustment factor or factors were applied consistent with truth-in-data, the source and adjustment factor source characteristics are disclosed. With this type of information, the data user is in a better position to understand the data set and summary statistics, ask questions, and appropriately apply the data. Truth-in-data ensures that traffic data can be correctly interpreted and appropriately used to improve highway operations safety and efficiency.
4.1.3 Exceptions—Traffic monitoring truth-in-data does not address subsequent use of the data and summary statistics as in longitudinal studies. Traffic monitoring truth-in-data establishes the basis for appropriate current and longer-term use of base data and summary statistics. Critical use of traffic monitoring data, such as in safety analysis, depends on the data clarity and integrity identified by implementing truth-in-data. Traffic monitoring truth-in-data does not address data storage. Traffic monitoring truth-in-data describes the conditions leading to acceptance of data for storage and the reporting of data retrieved from storage. The metadata structure for archived data management systems (ADMS) recommended for traffic monitoring data is presented in Specification E2665. An ADMS is the information management system used to store traffic data with integrity over time.
Subcomité:
E17.52
Volúmen:
04.03
Número ICS:
03.220.20 (Road transport)
Palabras clave:
base data integrity; traffic monitoring; truth-in-data;
$ 1,190
Norma
E2759
Versión
10(2024)
Estatus
Active
Clasificación
Practice
Fecha aprobación
2024-11-01
