TY - JOUR
T1 - Improving roadside design policies for safety enhancement using hazard-based duration modeling
AU - Roque, Carlos
AU - Jalayer, Mohammad
N1 - Funding Information:
Carlos Roque gratefully acknowledges the scholarship SFRH/BPD/118499/2016 by the Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation Agency (FCT - Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, IP). The authors would also like to acknowledge Anusha Patel Nujjetty, Manager at the Highway Safety Information System (HSIS) Laboratory, for providing the accident data used in this study. The authors also express their gratitude to two anonymous reviewers for their valuable remarks, which have enhanced the quality of this paper.
PY - 2018/11
Y1 - 2018/11
N2 - Roadway departure (RwD) crashes, comprising run-off-road (ROR) and cross-median/centerline head-on collisions, are one of the most lethal crash types. Nationwide, from 2014 to 2016, annual RwD crashes accounted for 53% of all motor vehicle traffic fatalities. Several factors may cause a driver leave the travel lane, including an avoidance maneuver and inattention or fatigue. Roadway and roadside geometric design features (e.g., lane widths and clear zones) play a significant role in whether human error results in a crash. In this paper, we present a hazard-based duration model to investigate the distance traveled by an errant vehicle in a run-off-road crash, the stopping hazard rates, and associated risk factors. For this study, we obtained five years’ (2010–2014) of crash data related to roadway departures (i.e., overturn and fixed-object crashes) from the Federal Highway Administration's Highway Safety Information System Database. The results indicate that over 50% of the observed vehicles traveled no more than 36 ft. in a ROR crash and 25% of the observed vehicles traveled at least 78 ft. We also found that seasonal, roadway, and crash variables, along with vehicle information and driver characteristics significantly contributed to the distances traveled by errant vehicles in ROR crashes. This paper presents methodological empirical evidence that the Cox proportional-hazards model is appropriate for investigating the distances traveled by errant vehicles in ROR crashes. In addition, it also provides valuable information for traffic design and management agencies to improve roadside design policies and implementing appropriately forgiving roadsides for errant vehicles.
AB - Roadway departure (RwD) crashes, comprising run-off-road (ROR) and cross-median/centerline head-on collisions, are one of the most lethal crash types. Nationwide, from 2014 to 2016, annual RwD crashes accounted for 53% of all motor vehicle traffic fatalities. Several factors may cause a driver leave the travel lane, including an avoidance maneuver and inattention or fatigue. Roadway and roadside geometric design features (e.g., lane widths and clear zones) play a significant role in whether human error results in a crash. In this paper, we present a hazard-based duration model to investigate the distance traveled by an errant vehicle in a run-off-road crash, the stopping hazard rates, and associated risk factors. For this study, we obtained five years’ (2010–2014) of crash data related to roadway departures (i.e., overturn and fixed-object crashes) from the Federal Highway Administration's Highway Safety Information System Database. The results indicate that over 50% of the observed vehicles traveled no more than 36 ft. in a ROR crash and 25% of the observed vehicles traveled at least 78 ft. We also found that seasonal, roadway, and crash variables, along with vehicle information and driver characteristics significantly contributed to the distances traveled by errant vehicles in ROR crashes. This paper presents methodological empirical evidence that the Cox proportional-hazards model is appropriate for investigating the distances traveled by errant vehicles in ROR crashes. In addition, it also provides valuable information for traffic design and management agencies to improve roadside design policies and implementing appropriately forgiving roadsides for errant vehicles.
KW - Cox model
KW - Forgiving roadside
KW - Hazard-based duration model
KW - Roadside design
KW - Run-off-road crash
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U2 - 10.1016/j.aap.2018.08.008
DO - 10.1016/j.aap.2018.08.008
M3 - Article
C2 - 30138771
AN - SCOPUS:85051667285
SN - 0001-4575
VL - 120
SP - 165
EP - 173
JO - Accident Analysis and Prevention
JF - Accident Analysis and Prevention
ER -