Fred Mannering is an American scientist/engineer who is most known for the development and application of statistical and
econometric methods to study
highway safety,
economics,
travel behavior, and a variety of engineering-related problems.
Mannering has received numerous awards in his discipline. In 2005 he won the Wilbur S. Smith Award,[2] in 2009 the James Laurie Prize,[3] and in 2010 the Arthur M. Wellington Prize[4] for his papers and work in highway safety (all three awarded by the
American Society of Civil Engineers). He received the Murphy Teaching Award, Purdue University's highest undergraduate teaching honor, in 2013.[5][6] In 2016, he was named by the Eno Foundation as one of the Top 10 Transportation Thought Leaders in Academia[7] and in 2019, his 1996 paper on highway accident frequency was recognized by the American Society of Civil Engineers as one of four
Journal of Transportation Engineering Part A: Systems papers that have been instrumental in moving civil engineering forward or have changed the practice of transportation engineering, infrastructure, and development.[8] In 2020, Mannering was recognized as the most highly-cited author (highest total citations and citations per paper) in the 50-year history of the journal Accident Analysis and Prevention[9] and in 2021 he received the Council of University Transportation Centers (HNTB-CUTC) Lifetime Achievement Award.[10] For five consecutive years (2019 to 2023 inclusive), Mannering was on
Clarivate's annual list of the world's most influential researchers of the past decade, who were recognized for writing multiple highly cited papers that rank in the top 1% by citations for field and year in
Web of Science.[11][12][13][14][15]
Research
Mannering is known for his work in highway safety, statistics, and econometrics. He has published extensively with over 150 journal articles.[16][17] Some of his most impactful work includes research on highway accident frequency and injury severity,[18][19] the effects of unobserved heterogeneity in highway safety analysis,[20] and his work on temporal instability in the analysis of highway accident data.[21] He has contributed to the advancement of science and engineering through his teaching and as an author of two widely adopted textbooks: Principles of Highway Engineering and Traffic Analysis and Statistical and Econometric Methods for Transportation Data Analysis. Mannering is Editor-in-Chief (and founding Editor) of the journal Analytic Methods in Accident Research[22] and past Editor-in-Chief and current Distinguished Editorial Board Member of the journal Transportation Research Part B - Methodological.[23]