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Die neuen Kommunikationstechniken lösen eine Reihe von Fragen aus: Welches System ist zukunftssicher und einführbar?, Welche Informationen nützen dem Autofahrer, ohne dass die Übermittlung seine Aufmerksamkeit vom Fahren ablenkt?, Welche Kosten erfordert ds System?, Kann die erforderliche Organisation aufgebaut werden? Für die Eigenschaften eines Fahrzeuginternen Leit- und Informationssystems (FZ-LI) sollten die Bedürfnisse des Benutzers Vorrang vor dem technisch Machbaren haben. Verkehrstechnisch behält die externe Beschilderung die Priorität. Das FZ-LI liefert nur eine zusätzliche Information. Zum Betrieb bedarf es einer hochwertigen Organisation und technischen Ausstattung für die Erfassung und Verarbeitung von verkehrsrelevanten Daten, zur Ableitung von aktuellen Leitprogrammen und Information der Kraftfahrer. Hierfür sind regionale Leitzentralen nötig, die nur von staatlichen Stellen aufgebaut und betrieben werden können. Die Untersuchung der Investitions- und Folgekosten der öffentlichen Hand werden angegeben. Für die Infrastruktur kommen freistahlende Sender und Baken in Frage. Ausgangsstufen für FZ-LI sind autarke Orientierungssysteme und das Autoradio. Die Erörterung der technischen Realisierbarkeit eines FZ-LI sowie seiner Einzelkomponenten kommt zu dem Schluss, dass keine grundlegenden Schwierigkeiten zu erwarten sind. Das eigentliche Problem ist die Realisierung der Organisation eines Verkehrsmanagements im Rahmen der vorhandenen Struktur der öffentlichen Verwaltung.
Due to recent years accident avoidance and crashworthiness on Austrian roads were mostly developed on national statistics and on-scene investigation respectively. Identification and elimination of black spots were main targets. In fact many fatal accidents do not occur on such black spots and black-spot investigation has reached a limit. New methods are required and therefore the Austrian Road Safety Programme was introduced by the Austrian Ministry of Transport, Innovation and Technology. The primary objective is the reduction of fatalities and severe injuries. Graz University of Technology initiated the project ZEDATU (Zentrale Datenbank tödlicher Unfälle) with the goal to identify similarities in different accident configurations. A matrix was established which categorizes risk and key factors of participating parties. Based on this information countermeasures were worked out.
Bedingt durch ihre Definition - mindestens 24-stündiger Klinikaufenthalt - umfasst die Kategorie der Schwerverletzten in der amtlichen Verkehrsunfallstatistik eine große Breite tatsächlicher Verletzungsschweregrade. Durch das hohe persönliche Leid sowie die bedeutsamen volkswirtschaftlichen Kosten sind innerhalb dieser Gruppe die Schwerstverletzten von besonderem Interesse. Es werden drei Studien der Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen (BASt) vorgestellt, in denen auf Grundlage verschiedener Datenquellen Verletzungsmuster und Verletzungsschwere in Zusammenhang mit Parametern des Unfallgeschehens gebracht wurden. Zusammengefasst zeigt sich, dass (a) die Zahl der Schwerstverletzten sich in den letzten Jahren nicht in gleichem Maße reduziert hat, wie die Zahlen Schwerverletzter und Getöteter; (b) sich über verschiedene Datenquellen (GIDAS, TraumaRegister DGU, Rettungsdienst, Polizei) ähnliche Verletzungsmuster in Abhängigkeit der Verkehrsteilnahme zeigen; (c) durch die Verbindung von medizinischen Daten des TraumaRegisters mit Daten der Polizei gute Voraussetzungen für eine umfangreiche Erfassung Schwerstverletzter in Deutschland geschaffen werden könnten.
Die Umfelddatenerfassung spielt in der Verkehrsbeeinflussung mittels Streckenbeeinflussungsanlagen (SBA) eine bedeutende Rolle. Auf Basis aktueller Verkehrs- und Umfelddaten (Witterungsdaten) werden auf Bundesfernstraßen Schaltungen zur Erhöhung der Verkehrssicherheit generiert. Mittels dynamischer Wechselverkehrszeichen (WVZ) werden die Verkehrsteilnehmer vor Umfeldbedingungen, die zu gefährlichen Situationen führen können, gewarnt. Umfeldbedingte Schaltungen können jedoch nur dann positiven Einfluss auf die Verkehrssicherheit erzielen, wenn die Anzeigen einer SBA durch die Verkehrsteilnehmer befolgt werden. Hierfür ist es erforderlich, dass die stationär erfassten Umfelddaten eine gute Qualität aufweisen und die aktuellen Umfeldbedingungen zeitnah im System abgebildet werden. Aufgrund der Wichtigkeit der Umfelddatenerfassung und des für die Praxis zu erwartenden Nutzens wurde im Arbeitskreis "Umfelddatenerfassung in Streckenbeeinflussungsanlagen" der Forschungsgesellschaft für Straßen- und Verkehrswesen (FGSV) die Notwendigkeit für den Aufbau eines Testfeldes für Systeme zur Erfassung der Umfeldsituation festgestellt und der Aufbau eines solchen Testfeldes beschlossen. Das im Jahr 2003 errichtete Testfeld bei München erlaubt, die Umfeldgrößen beziehungsweise die Sensoren zu deren Erfassung praxisnah und längerfristig zu untersuchen. Die Sensoren verschiedener Hersteller werden unter gleichen Bedingungen geprüft und bezüglich ihrer Eignung für den Einsatz in SBA eingestuft. Gleichzeitig besteht für die Hersteller die Möglichkeit, die Hard- und Software der Sensorik zu verbessern. Erfahrungen aus dem Testfeld und der Praxis erlaubten eine Ableitung von Anforderungen für Ausschreibung, Abnahme und Betrieb von Umfeldsensoren, welche im Hinweispapier der FGSV zusammen gefasst wurden. Die darin beschriebenen Plausibilitätskontrollen der erfassten Umfelddaten können in Verkehrszentralen direkt durchgeführt werden. Systematische und logisch/physikalische Fehler werden zeitnah und automatisch erkannt, unplausible und nicht nachvollziehbare Schaltungen können somit reduziert werden.
The changed focus in vehicle safety technology from secondary to primary safety systems need to evolve new methods to investigate accidents, high critical, critical and normal driving situations. Current Naturalistic Driving Studies mostly use vehicles that are highly equipped with additional measuring devices, video cameras, recording technology, and sensors. These equipped fleets are very expensive regarding the setup and administration of the study. Due to the great rarity of crashes it is additionally necessary to have a high distribution and a homogeneous distribution of subject groups. At the end all these facts are leading to a very expensive study with a manageable number of data. Smartphones are becoming more and more popular not only for younger people. Contrary to traditional mobile phones they are mostly equipped with sensors for acceleration and yaw rates, GPS modules as well as cameras in high definition resolution. Additionally they have high-performance processors that enable the execution of CPU-intensive tools directly on the phone. The wide distribution of these smartphones enables researchers to get high numbers of users for such studies. The paper shows and demonstrates a software app for smartphones that is able to record different driving situations up to crashes. Therefore all relevant parameter from the sensors, camera and GPS device are saved for a given duration if the event was triggered. The complete configuration is independently adjustable to the relevant driver and all events were sent automatically to the research institute for a further process. Direct after the event, interviews with the driver can be done and important data regarding the event itself are documented. The presentation shows the methodology and gives a demonstration of the working progress as well as first results and examples of the current study. In the discussion the advantages of this method will be discussed and compared with the disadvantages. The paper shows an alternative method to investigate real accident and incident data. This method is thereby highly cost efficient and comparable with existing methods for benefit estimation.
The role of a national motor vehicle crash causation study-style data set in rollover data analysis
(2010)
On 1 January 2005, The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, an agency of the United States Department of Transportation, implemented a new data collection strategy designed to assess crash avoidance technologies and report associated behavioral inputs and outcomes. The original goal was a six-year program, however, during the shortened data collection period; it proved a valuable resource for understanding a precrash environment previously obscured by forensic case investigation. Another unintended consequence was an overlap with infrastructure, roadway geometry, and design with the occupant and vehicle outcomes, by virtue of well-defined attributes. External to the collected data, supplementary information was extrapolated, by using manuals published in the United States, by the American Association of State Highway Transportation Officials and selected State Departments of Transportation, in conjunction with the National Motor Vehicle Crash Causation Study (NMVCCS). This provided a backdrop to the infrastructure framework of the rollover problem within which the occupant and vehicle outcomes were studied. If a NMVCCS-style data collection were to be implemented elsewhere, then complementary manuals produced by federal transportation officials might be consulted producing similar relationships. The current study uses NMVCCS data to describe vehicles travelling through diverse design geometries and the outcome for occupants involved in crashes within that system. Codified and extrapolated data form the basis for assessing NMVCCS and its value to the transportation safety community, as the protocols are applicable universally. The benefit in continuing a NMVCCS-style study is noted, as the interaction of roadway infrastructure and occupant protection agencies might find paths to better work together in solving the complex rollover problem using a common data-driven approach.
During the last 5 years, the number of cars fitted with side airbags has dramatically increased. They are now standard equipment, even on many smaller cars or less luxurious vehicles. While some side airbags offer thoracic protection alone, there are those that combine thoracic and head protection (of which most deploy from the seat). Other systems employ separate airbags for head and thorax protection, which are designed to be effective noticeably in a crash against a pole. This paper proposes an evaluation of the effectiveness of side airbags in preventing thoracic injuries to passenger car occupants involved in side crashes. First, the target population (who can take benefit of side airbag deployment and in what circumstances) is defined. Side airbags can be especially effective in cases of impacts on the door with intrusion at a certain impact speed. Then, an example case of a side impact with side airbag deployment is given were side airbag deployment is thought to have had a positive effect on injury outcome. A further case is presented where the impact configuration is likely to have reduced the effect of side airbag deployment on injury outcome. Finally, the estimation of side airbag effectiveness (in terms of additional occupant protection brought exclusively by the airbag) is proposed by comparing injury risk sustained by occupants in (more or less) similar cars (fitted or non fitted with airbags) because, during these years, car structure, and side airbag conception have considerably evolved. In-depth accident data from France, the UK and Germany has been collected. Out of 2,035 side impact accident cases available in the databases, we selected 435 occupants of passenger cars (built from 1998 onwards) involved in an injury accident between year 1998 and year 2004 for EES (Energy Equivalent Speed) values between 20km/h and 50km/h. The occupants, belted or not, were sat on the struck side, whatever the obstacle and type of accidents (intersection, loss of control, etc.). For multiple impact crashes, the side impact is assumed to be the more severe one. Passenger cars were fitted with (96) or without (339) side airbags. Most of the potential risk explanatory variables were correctly and reliably reported in the databases (velocity " impact zone " impact angle " occupant characteristics, etc.). The analysis compared injury risks for different levels of EES and different types of side airbags. A logistic regression model was also computed with injury variables (such as thoracic AIS 2+ or AIS 3+) as the dependant variable and other variables (including airbag type and EES) as explanatory injury risk factors. Results revealed statistically non-significant reductions in thoracic AIS 2+ and AIS 3+ injury risk in side airbag equipped cars in the impact violence range selected (odds ratio between 0.84 and 0.98 depending on types of airbags). The results are discussed. The non-significance is assumed to be due to a low number of cases. Statistical analysis for head injuries was not possible due to the low number of accident cases with passenger cars fitted with head airbags in the databases. Moreover, the discrepancies between the data coming from different countries (especially calculation of EES) might have introduced instability in the analysis.
This study is aimed to investigate the correlations of impact conditions and dynamic responses with the injuries and injury severity of child pedestrians by accident reconstruction. For this purpose, the pedestrian accident cases were selected from Sweden and Germany with detailed information about injuries, accident cars, and accident environment. The selected accident cases were reconstructed using mathematical models of pedestrian and passenger car. The pedestrian models were generated based on the height, weight, and age of the pedestrian involved in accidents. The car models were built up based on the corresponding accident car. The impact speeds in simulations were defined based on the reported data. The calculated physical quantities were analyzed to find the correlation with injury outcomes registered in the accident database. The reconstruction approaches are discussed in terms of data collection, estimating vehicle impact speeds, pedestrian moving speeds and initial posture, secondary ground impact, validity of the mathematical models, as well as impact biomechanics.
Impact severity is a fundamental measure for all in-depth crash investigation projects. One methodology used in the UK is based on the US Calspan software package CRASH3. The UK- in-depth crash investigation studies routinely use AiDamage3 a software package which is based on an updated version of the original CRASH3 algorithm, including enhancements to the vehicle stiffness coefficients. Real world accident-damaged vehicles are measured and their crush is correlated with a library of stiffness coefficients. These measurements are then used, along with other parameters, to calculate the crash energy and equivalent changes of velocity of the vehicles (delta-v), which is a measure of the impact severity. UK in-depth accident studies routinely validate the crash severity methodologies applied as the vehicle fleet changes. This is achieved by analysing crash test data and using the appropriate residual crush damage and other inputs to AiDamage3 and checking the program- outputs with the known crash severity parameters. This procedure checks, at least in part, the default stiffness values in the data libraries and the reconstruction methods used.
Die derzeitige Verkehrserfassung soll stufenweise verbessert werden. Erste Stufe ist die Einführung von ARIAM: Das Bundesverkehrsministerium will die Voraussetzungen dafür schaffen, dass Informationen unmittelbar aus Zähldaten an den Autobahnen erhoben werden können. Zur Organisation für ein verbessertes Informationssystem ist die Verknüpfung der zuständigen Behörden, die Einrichtung von Leitzentralen und deren Verbindung durch einen Datenpool notwendig.