The Dunedin City Council has received 189 responses to a survey seeking information on safety issues at intersections in the city controlled by traffic lights.
Council senior traffic engineer Ron Minnema said the response to the electronic survey was "great".
The content responses, 164 of which were made online, were expected to be analysed by the end of May.
Crash statistics in recent years have shown Dunedin to have one of the highest crash rates at urban intersections in the country.
The council had identified 46 crash hot spots in the city, and most of those were at intersections controlled by traffic lights, Mr Minnema said.
It was upgrading nine of the highest-risk traffic light-controlled intersections in the city, and there were more on the work programme after that.
Staff were also taking another look at traffic light-controlled intersections to make sure they were operating at their safest after the change to the give-way rule.
The survey was part of a "multi-pronged" approach to improving safety at traffic light-controlled intersections in Dunedin, and it was hoped respondents might point out any operational issues the council had not already identified, Mr Minnema said.