The Unsung Heroes of Automotive Safety
Cadavers, not mannequins, were the original crash test dummies, enduring brutal experiments for safer cars.
Quote
The cadaver has the feel of a living body. It is yielding and giving. There is some resilience to it.
Mary Roach describes how cadavers were used in early automotive safety research, especially by Dr. Lawrence Patrick at Wayne State University. Unlike today's uniform crash test dummies, cadavers gave valuable data on how human tissue, bones, and organs react to extreme forces. They were used in high-speed impacts, pendulum strikes, and rocket sled experiments to understand injury patterns in real bodies. This early, ethically complex work, though unsettling, built the foundation for seatbelt design, airbag deployment, and vehicle crum...
Supporting evidence
Dr. Lawrence Patrick's pioneering work at Wayne State University in the 1960s, subjecting cadavers to crash simulations.
Apply this
When considering the safety features of modern vehicles, reflect on the historical context and the extreme lengths researchers went to understand human injury tolerance.









