Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
- Konferenzveröffentlichung (432) (entfernen)
Volltext vorhanden
- ja (432) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Conference (334)
- Konferenz (331)
- Germany (163)
- Deutschland (161)
- Accident (152)
- Unfall (152)
- Injury (97)
- Verletzung (97)
- Unfallrekonstruktion (86)
- Safety (72)
- Sicherheit (71)
- Statistics (66)
- Statistik (65)
- Analyse (math) (58)
- Analysis (math) (57)
- Reconstruction (accid) (57)
- Schweregrad (Unfall, Verletzung) (57)
- Tödlicher Unfall (56)
- Fatality (55)
- Severity (accid, injury) (55)
- Datenbank (50)
- Fahrzeug (50)
- Vehicle (50)
- Datenerfassung (48)
- Driver (48)
- Data acquisition (47)
- Test (47)
- Fahrer (46)
- Versuch (45)
- On the spot accident investigation (44)
- injury) (43)
- Schweregrad (Unfall (42)
- Simulation (42)
- Untersuchung am Unfallort (42)
- Ursache (42)
- Verletzung) (42)
- Bewertung (41)
- Car (41)
- Cause (41)
- Unfallverhütung (41)
- Fußgänger (40)
- Pedestrian (40)
- Severity (accid (40)
- Evaluation (assessment) (39)
- Accident prevention (36)
- Data bank (36)
- Collision (32)
- Geschwindigkeit (32)
- Zusammenstoß (32)
- Method (31)
- Speed (31)
- Verfahren (30)
- Accident reconstruction (29)
- Active safety system (29)
- Risiko (28)
- Aktives Sicherheitssystem (27)
- Driving aptitude (27)
- Passives Sicherheitssystem (27)
- Frontalzusammenstoß (26)
- Leistungsfähigkeit (allg) (26)
- Prevention (26)
- Radfahrer (26)
- Risk (26)
- Cyclist (25)
- Head on collision (24)
- Improvement (24)
- Motorcyclist (24)
- Motorradfahrer (24)
- Passive safety system (24)
- Behaviour (23)
- Efficiency (23)
- Verbesserung (23)
- Verhalten (23)
- Anfahrversuch (22)
- Fahrerassistenzsystem (22)
- Insasse (22)
- Europa (21)
- Europe (21)
- Fahrzeugführung (21)
- PKW (21)
- Pkw (20)
- Bridge (19)
- Interview (19)
- Specifications (19)
- Vehicle occupant (19)
- Accident rate (18)
- Alte Leute (18)
- Driver assistance system (18)
- Driving (veh) (18)
- Droge (18)
- Drugs (18)
- Erziehung (18)
- Old people (18)
- Prüfverfahren (18)
- Richtlinien (18)
- Verminderung (18)
- Education (17)
- Legislation (17)
- Test method (17)
- Unfallhäufigkeit (17)
- Benutzung (16)
- Berechnung (16)
- Decrease (16)
- Fahrtauglichkeit (16)
- Gesetzgebung (16)
- Measurement (16)
- Use (16)
- Calculation (15)
- Child (15)
- Development (15)
- Entwicklung (15)
- Kind (15)
- Messung (15)
- Planning (15)
- Sicherheitsgurt (15)
- Traffic (15)
- Verhütung (15)
- Verkehr (15)
- Brücke (14)
- EU (14)
- Fahranfänger (14)
- Medical aspects (14)
- Medizinische Gesichtspunkte (14)
- Motorrad (14)
- Planung (14)
- Prognose (14)
- Recently qualified driver (14)
- Repair (14)
- Database (13)
- Digital model (13)
- Impact test (veh) (13)
- International (13)
- Metal bridge (13)
- Motorcycle (13)
- Numerisches Modell (13)
- Rechenmodell (13)
- Sachschaden (13)
- Safety belt (13)
- Stahlbrücke (13)
- Arzneimittel (12)
- Auffahrunfall (12)
- Damage (12)
- Human factor (12)
- Illness (12)
- Information (12)
- Instandsetzung (12)
- Krankheit (12)
- Mathematical model (12)
- Medication (12)
- Menschlicher Faktor (12)
- Rear end collision (12)
- Seitlicher Zusammenstoß (12)
- Skill (road user) (12)
- Überschlagen (12)
- Adolescent (11)
- Biomechanics (11)
- Biomechanik (11)
- Driver training (11)
- Drunkenness (11)
- Einstellung (psychol) (11)
- Forecast (11)
- Highway (11)
- Jugendlicher (11)
- Lorry (11)
- Orthotropic plate (11)
- Risikobewertung (11)
- Schutzhelm (11)
- Side impact (11)
- Trunkenheit (11)
- Age (10)
- Alter (10)
- Crash helmet (10)
- Expert opinion (10)
- Fahrzeugsitz (10)
- Gutachten (10)
- Kontrolle (10)
- Leg (human) (10)
- Medizinische Untersuchung (10)
- Overturning (veh) (10)
- Risk assessment (10)
- Straße (10)
- Surveillance (10)
- Air pollution (9)
- Airbag (9)
- Attitude (psychol) (9)
- Austria (9)
- Belastung (9)
- Bremsung (9)
- Deformation (9)
- Error (9)
- Fahrausbildung (9)
- Head (9)
- Impact study (9)
- Japan (9)
- Kopf (9)
- Load (9)
- Luftverunreinigung (9)
- Medical examination (9)
- Nitrogen oxide (9)
- Road network (9)
- Seat (veh) (9)
- Straßennetz (9)
- Verformung (9)
- Verkehrsinfrastruktur (9)
- Österreich (9)
- Air bag (restraint system) (8)
- Blood alcohol content (8)
- Blutalkoholgehalt (8)
- Braking (8)
- Brustkorb (8)
- Detection (8)
- Fehler (8)
- Information documentation (8)
- Modification (8)
- Road construction (8)
- Software (8)
- Stickoxid (8)
- Straßenbau (8)
- Veränderung (8)
- Wirbelsäule (8)
- Administration (7)
- Antikollisionssystem (7)
- Bauwerk (7)
- Bein (menschl) (7)
- Blood (7)
- Blut (7)
- Chemical analysis (7)
- Condition survey (7)
- Construction (7)
- Engineering structure (7)
- Erste Hilfe (7)
- Fahreignung (7)
- Fahrgeschicklichkeit (7)
- Fracture (bone) (7)
- Front (7)
- Knochenbruch (7)
- Knotenpunkt (7)
- Krankenhaus (7)
- Maintenance (7)
- Ort (Position) (7)
- Orthotrope Fahrbahntafel (7)
- Reaction (human) (7)
- Standardisierung (7)
- Tragfähigkeit (7)
- Transport infrastructure (7)
- USA (7)
- Unterhaltung (7)
- Vereinigtes Königreich (7)
- Verkehrsteilnehmer (7)
- Verwaltung (7)
- Welding (7)
- Attention (6)
- Aufmerksamkeit (6)
- Bau (6)
- Bearing capacity (6)
- Bridge deck (6)
- Chemische Analyse (6)
- China (6)
- Collision avoidance system (6)
- Dauerhaftigkeit (6)
- Detektion (6)
- Driving licence (6)
- Durability (6)
- Fahrbahntafel (6)
- Fernverkehrsstraße (6)
- Führerschein (6)
- Halswirbel (6)
- Hospital (6)
- India (6)
- Indien (6)
- Junction (6)
- Leistungsfähigkeit (Fahrer) (6)
- Lkw (6)
- Location (6)
- Main road (6)
- Mobility (6)
- Mobilität (6)
- Policy (6)
- Politik (6)
- Portugal (6)
- Probability (6)
- Psychologie (6)
- Psychology (6)
- Reaktionsverhalten (6)
- Road user (6)
- Schweissen (6)
- Sensor (6)
- Standardization (6)
- Steifigkeit (6)
- Stiffness (6)
- Straßenverkehrsrecht (6)
- Thorax (6)
- Traffic regulations (6)
- Wahrscheinlichkeit (6)
- Wirksamkeitsuntersuchung (6)
- Zustandsbewertung (6)
- Addiction (5)
- Analyse (Math) (5)
- Ausrüstung (5)
- Beam (5)
- Beschichtung (5)
- Bremse (5)
- Cervical vertebrae (5)
- Coating (5)
- Continuous (5)
- Correlation (math, stat) (5)
- Corrosion (5)
- Cost benefit analysis (5)
- Cracking (5)
- Decision process (5)
- Driver information (5)
- Eins (5)
- Entscheidungsprozess (5)
- Equipment (5)
- Erfahrung (menschl) (5)
- Experience (human) (5)
- Fahrtüchtigkeit (5)
- First aid (5)
- France (5)
- Frankreich (5)
- Frau (5)
- Grenzwert (5)
- Impact test (5)
- Interior (veh) (5)
- Kontinuierlich (5)
- Korrosion (5)
- Limit (5)
- Lärm (5)
- Nanotechnologie (5)
- Nanotechnology (5)
- Noise (5)
- Oberfläche (5)
- One (5)
- Oxid (5)
- Oxide (5)
- Perception (5)
- Post crash (5)
- Quality assurance (5)
- Qualitätssicherung (5)
- Reinforcement (gen) (5)
- Rissbildung (5)
- Schutzeinrichtung (5)
- Sichtbarkeit (5)
- Spinal column (5)
- Stahl (5)
- Steel (5)
- Stress (5)
- Stress (psychol) (5)
- Surface (5)
- Süchtigkeit (5)
- Titan (5)
- Titanium (5)
- United Kingdom (5)
- Verstärkung (allg) (5)
- Sichtbarkeit (5)
- Vorn (5)
- Wahrnehmung (5)
- Wirtschaftlichkeitsrechnung (5)
- Abbiegen (4)
- Adaptation (psychol) (4)
- Alcohol test (4)
- Alkoholtest (4)
- Angle (4)
- Anpassung (psychol) (4)
- Autobahn (4)
- Balken (4)
- Bemessung (4)
- Berufsausübung (4)
- Blech (4)
- Brake (4)
- Classification (4)
- Coefficient of friction (4)
- Collision test (veh) (4)
- Composite bridge (4)
- Concentration (chem) (4)
- Contract (4)
- Cost (4)
- Delivery vehicle (4)
- Design (overall design) (4)
- Distraction (4)
- Dynamics (4)
- Dynamik (4)
- EU directive (4)
- Echtzeit (4)
- Economic efficiency (4)
- Electronic stability program (4)
- Emission control (4)
- Emissionskontrolle (4)
- Estimation (4)
- European Union (4)
- Fahrdatenschreiber (4)
- Fahrstabilität (4)
- Fahrzeuginnenraum (4)
- Finite element method (4)
- Forschungsarbeit (4)
- Geschichte (4)
- Highway design (4)
- History (4)
- Human body (4)
- Information management (4)
- Klassifizierung (4)
- Kompatibilität (4)
- Korrelation (math, stat) (4)
- LKW (4)
- Lieferfahrzeug (4)
- Menschlicher Körper (4)
- Norm (tech) (4)
- Oberflächentextur (4)
- Occupant (veh) (4)
- Occupation (4)
- Organisation (4)
- Orthotrope Platte (4)
- Personal (4)
- Personality (4)
- Personnel (4)
- Persönlichkeit (4)
- Police (4)
- Polizei (4)
- Psychological aspects (4)
- Psychologische Gesichtspunkte (4)
- Quality (4)
- Qualität (4)
- Real time (4)
- Regression analysis (4)
- Regressionsanalyse (4)
- Reibungsbeiwert (4)
- Risk taking (4)
- Road traffic (4)
- Schrägseilbrücke (4)
- Schweden (4)
- Sheet (metal) (4)
- Stadt (4)
- Stayed girder bridge (4)
- Steife (Brücke) (4)
- Straßenentwurf (4)
- Straßenverkehr (4)
- Surface texture (4)
- Unfallfolgemaßnahme (4)
- Urban area (4)
- Vehicle handling (4)
- Verbundbrücke (4)
- Winkel (4)
- Wirtschaftlichkeit (4)
- Woman (4)
- Abkommen von der Fahrbahn (Unfall) (3)
- Ablenkung (psychol) (3)
- Accident proneness (3)
- Advanced driver assistance system (3)
- Aggression (psychol) (3)
- Anthropometric dummy (3)
- Arbeitsgruppe (3)
- Auftrag (3)
- Australia (3)
- Australien (3)
- Befreiung (Bergung) (3)
- Behinderter (3)
- Beinahe Unfall (3)
- Bicycle (3)
- Blickfeld (3)
- Body (car) (3)
- Budget (3)
- Cable (3)
- Camera (3)
- Case law (3)
- Compatibility (3)
- Contact (tyre road) (3)
- Crash test (3)
- Crashtest (3)
- Czech Republic (3)
- Digitale Bildverarbeitung (3)
- EU-Richtlinie (3)
- Effectiveness (3)
- Eigenschaft (3)
- Electronic driving aid (3)
- Elektronische Fahrhilfe (3)
- Elektronisches Stabilitätsprogramm (3)
- Entdeckung (3)
- Ermüdung (mater) (3)
- Event data recorder (road vehicle) (3)
- Extrication (3)
- Fahrerinformation (3)
- Fahrrad (3)
- Fahrsimulator (3)
- Feinstaub (3)
- Field of vision (3)
- Financing (3)
- Finanzierung (3)
- Forschungsbericht (3)
- Frequency (3)
- Gemeindeverwaltung (3)
- Genauigkeit (3)
- Geschwindigkeitsbeschränkung (3)
- Gesetzesdurchführung (3)
- Gesetzesübertretung (3)
- Gestaltung (3)
- Government (national) (3)
- Harmonisation (3)
- Hazard (3)
- Head restraint (3)
- Immission (3)
- Impact sled (3)
- Installation (3)
- Kamera (3)
- Karosserie (3)
- Kleidung (3)
- Konzentration (chem) (3)
- Kopfstütze (3)
- Korea (Süd) (Demokratische Republik) (3)
- Kosten (3)
- Kraftfahrzeug (3)
- Layout (3)
- Local authority (3)
- Longitudinal (3)
- Längs (3)
- Lärmschutzwand (3)
- Man (3)
- Mann (3)
- Methode der finiten Elemente (3)
- Modell (3)
- Montage (3)
- Motorway (3)
- Nacht (3)
- Near miss (3)
- Night (3)
- Noise barrier (3)
- Offence (3)
- Overtaking (3)
- Particulate matter (3)
- Passenger (3)
- Pollution concentration (3)
- Properties (3)
- Psychological examination (3)
- Psychologische Untersuchung (3)
- Public transport (3)
- Quer (3)
- Rechtsprechung (3)
- Recording (3)
- Rehabilitation (3)
- Rehabilitation (road user) (3)
- Republic of Korea (3)
- Research project (3)
- Research report (3)
- Retraining of drivers (3)
- Run off the road (accid) (3)
- Safety fence (3)
- Schutz (3)
- Seite (3)
- Shock (3)
- Simulator (driving) (3)
- Specification (standard) (3)
- Speed limit (3)
- Stiffener (Bridge) (3)
- Surfacing (3)
- Technologie (3)
- Technology (3)
- Theorie (3)
- Theory (3)
- Time (3)
- Transverse (3)
- Trapezoidal beam (3)
- Tschechische Republik (3)
- Tunnel (3)
- Turn (3)
- Unfallneigung (3)
- Unfallschwerpunkt (3)
- United kingdom (3)
- Vegetation (3)
- Verschiebung (3)
- Versuchspuppe (3)
- Wirkungsanalyse (3)
- Working group (3)
- Zeit (3)
- Öffentlicher Verkehr (3)
- Überholen (3)
- Abdomen (2)
- Absorption (2)
- Abstandsregeltempomat (2)
- Acceleration (2)
- Accident black spot (2)
- Accuracy (2)
- Achslast (2)
- Aggressiveness (psychol) (2)
- Audit (2)
- Aufprallschlitten (2)
- Aufzeichnung (2)
- Ausbesserung (2)
- Ausführungsfehler (2)
- Automatisch (2)
- Automatische Notbremsung (2)
- Autonomous emergency braking (2)
- Axle load (2)
- Ballungsgebiet (2)
- Bein (2)
- Bepflanzung (2)
- Beschleunigung (2)
- Blendung (2)
- Blutkreislauf (2)
- Bremsweg (2)
- Bridge management system (2)
- Bruch (mech) (2)
- Brücken Management System (2)
- Brückenbelag (2)
- Bus (2)
- Chromatographie (2)
- Chromatography (2)
- Circulation (blood) (2)
- Clothing (2)
- Coach (2)
- Compliance (specif) (2)
- Conurbation (2)
- Crash victim (2)
- Cross section (2)
- Crossing the road (2)
- Cycle track (2)
- Damping (2)
- Datenübertragung (telekom) (2)
- Decke (Straße) (2)
- Defect (tech) (2)
- Deformable barrier (impact test) (2)
- Depth (2)
- Deutschalnd (2)
- Digital image processing (2)
- Disablement (2)
- Dreidimensional (2)
- Driving (2)
- Driving test (2)
- Dummy (2)
- Dusk (2)
- Dämmerung (2)
- Dämpfung (2)
- Edge (2)
- Eindringung (2)
- Eingabedaten (2)
- Electric bicycle (2)
- Elektrofahrrad (2)
- Emission (2)
- Enforcement (law) (2)
- Environment (2)
- Ergonomics (2)
- Ergonomie (2)
- Eu (2)
- Fahrbahnüberquerung (2)
- Fahrernachschulung (2)
- Fahrerweiterbildung (2)
- Fahrprüfung (2)
- Fahrzeugrückhaltesystem (2)
- Fahrzeugteil (Sicherheit) (2)
- Faserbewehrter Beton (2)
- Fatigue (human) (2)
- Fatigue (mater) (2)
- Fiber reinforced concrete (2)
- Finland (2)
- Finnland (2)
- Fire (2)
- Frequenz (2)
- Fuge (2)
- Gas (2)
- Gefahr (2)
- Geländefahrzeug (2)
- Glare (2)
- Griffigkeit (2)
- Group analysis (test) (2)
- Haftung (jur) (2)
- Harmonisierung (2)
- Herstellung (2)
- High performance concrete (2)
- Hinten (2)
- Input data (2)
- Intelligent transport system (2)
- Intelligentes Transportsystem (2)
- Interactive model (2)
- Interaktives Modell (2)
- Joint (structural) (2)
- Knee (human) (2)
- Knie (menschl) (2)
- Kontakt Reifen Straße (2)
- Kontakt Reifen-Straße (2)
- Langfristig (2)
- Length (2)
- Liability (2)
- Long term (2)
- Manufacture (2)
- Mental illness (2)
- Methode der finite Elemente (2)
- Mittelwert (2)
- Mobile phone (2)
- Mobiltelefon (2)
- Model (not math) (2)
- Movement (2)
- Müdigkeit (2)
- Nerve (2)
- Nerven (2)
- Netherlands (2)
- Niederlande (2)
- Offender (2)
- Organization (2)
- Organization (association) (2)
- Output (2)
- Overlapping (2)
- Penetration (2)
- Posture (2)
- Privatisierung (2)
- Programmed learning (2)
- Programmierter Unterricht (2)
- Provisorisch (2)
- Prüfung (2)
- Psychische Krankheit (2)
- Public private partnership (2)
- Pylon (2)
- Querschnitt (2)
- Radweg (2)
- Rear (2)
- Rechtsübertreter (2)
- Regierung (staat) (2)
- Reifenprofil (2)
- Reinforcement (in mater) (2)
- Reisebus (2)
- Responsibility (2)
- Restraint system (2)
- Ringanalyse (2)
- Risikoverhalten (2)
- Rücksichtslosigkeit (2)
- Sample (mater) (2)
- Schlag (2)
- Schleudertrauma (2)
- Schweiz (2)
- Sehvermögen (2)
- Seil (2)
- Seminar (2)
- Severity (acid (2)
- Skidding resistance (2)
- Spain (2)
- Spanien (2)
- Sport utility vehicle (2)
- Straßenseitenfläche (2)
- Sweden (2)
- Switzerland (2)
- Telefon (2)
- Telephone (2)
- Temporary (2)
- Three dimensional (2)
- Tiefe (2)
- Traffic control (2)
- Trapezförmiger Träger (2)
- Trend (stat) (2)
- Tyre tread (2)
- Umwelt (2)
- Umweltverträglichkeitsprüfung (2)
- Unfallopfer (2)
- Unterleib (2)
- Untersuchung am unfallort (2)
- Vehicle regulations (2)
- Vehicle restraint system (2)
- Vehicle safety device (2)
- Verantwortung (2)
- Verkehrssteuerung (2)
- Vision (2)
- Vorne (2)
- Vorschrifteneinhaltung (2)
- Warning (2)
- Warnung (2)
- Weather (2)
- Wet road (2)
- Whiplash injury (2)
- Witterung (2)
- Zeitreihe (stat) (2)
- Überlappung (2)
- Abgaben (1)
- Ability (road user) (1)
- Abkommen von der Fahrbahn (1)
- Ablenkung (1)
- Acceptability (1)
- Accident data (1)
- Accident prone location (1)
- Accident severity (1)
- Accompanied driving (1)
- Active safety system; Automatic; Brake; Car; Collision avoidance system; Conference; Driver assistance system; Germany; Impact test (veh); Rear end collision; Severity (accid (1)
- Activity report (1)
- Adaptive cruise control (1)
- Adaptive cruise controll (1)
- Adhesion (1)
- Adhäsion (1)
- Adult (1)
- Advanced vehicle control systems (1)
- Aesthetics (1)
- Aethanol (1)
- Aggression (psycho) (1)
- Air traffic control (1)
- Airbag (restraint system) (1)
- Aircraft (1)
- Alcohol (1)
- Alignment (1)
- Alkohol (1)
- Alternativ (1)
- Alternative (1)
- Aluminium (1)
- Analyse (1)
- Analyse (chem) (1)
- Analyses (math) (1)
- Anchorage (1)
- Animal (1)
- Anthropmetric dummy (1)
- Anthropometrie (1)
- Anthropometry (1)
- Anthrpometric dummy (1)
- Anti locking device (1)
- Antiblockiereinrichtung (1)
- Apparatus (measuring) (1)
- Arbeitsplatz (1)
- Arm (human) (1)
- Arm (menschl) (1)
- Articulated vehicle (1)
- Atem (1)
- Atives Sicherheitssystem (1)
- Attitide (psychol) (1)
- Auffharunfall (1)
- Aufzeichung (1)
- Ausländer (1)
- Automatic (1)
- Autonomes Fahren (1)
- Autonomes Fahrzeug (1)
- Autonomous driving (1)
- Autonomous vehicle (1)
- Autotür (1)
- Average (1)
- Back (human) (1)
- Batterie (1)
- Battery (1)
- Baum (1)
- Baumusterzulassung (1)
- Baustoff (1)
- Bauweise (1)
- Bauwerks Management System (1)
- Begleitetes Fahren (1)
- Bein [menschl] (1)
- Beschilderung (1)
- Betonfertigteil (1)
- Bevölkerung (1)
- Bewehrung (1)
- Bicyclist (1)
- Black ice (1)
- Blasting (1)
- Bone (1)
- Brain (1)
- Brake light (1)
- Braking distance (1)
- Brand (1)
- Brasilien (1)
- Brazil (1)
- Breaking (1)
- Breath (1)
- Bremslicht (1)
- Bridge surfacing (1)
- Bridges (1)
- Brücken (1)
- Bypass (loop road) (1)
- Böschung (1)
- Cadaver (1)
- Calibration (1)
- Cantilever (1)
- Car door (1)
- Carbon dioxide (1)
- Carriageway (1)
- Case study (1)
- Catalysis (1)
- Causes (1)
- Central reserve (1)
- Cervical vertebrae; Conference; Evaluation (assessment); Injury; Spinal column; Test (1)
- Chest (1)
- Cognitive impairment (1)
- Colthing (1)
- Comfort (1)
- Communication (1)
- Components of the vehicle (1)
- Comprehension (1)
- Compression (1)
- Computation (1)
- Conference; Germany; Injury; Medical examination; Spinal column; X ray (1)
- Confiscation (driving licence) (1)
- Construction method (1)
- Contact (tyre (1)
- Contractor (1)
- Control (1)
- Cross roads (1)
- Customer (1)
- Cycling (1)
- Data base (1)
- Data collection (1)
- Data processing (1)
- Data security (1)
- Data transmission (1)
- Data transmission (telecom) (1)
- Datensicherheit (1)
- Datenverarbeitung (1)
- Datenübertragung (Telekom) (1)
- Dauer (1)
- Day (24 hour period) (1)
- Deceleration (1)
- Decreases (1)
- Deformierbare Barriere (Anpralltest) (1)
- Deformierte Barriere (Anpralltest) (1)
- Density (1)
- Deterioration (1)
- Diabetes (1)
- Dichte (1)
- Digital computer (1)
- Digitalrechner (1)
- Disabled person (1)
- Dispersion (stat) (1)
- Displacement (1)
- Distribution (gen) (1)
- Driving aid (electronic) (1)
- Driving instructor (1)
- Dränasphalt (1)
- Dtetection (1)
- Durchsichtigkeit (1)
- EU Richtlinie (1)
- Earthworks (1)
- Ecosystem (1)
- Eichung (1)
- Einbau (1)
- Einfahrt (1)
- Ejection (1)
- Elastizitätsmodul (1)
- Electric vehicle (1)
- Electronics (1)
- Elektrofahrzeug (1)
- Elektronik (1)
- Elektronisches Stabilitätsprogram (1)
- Emergency (1)
- Emergency medical aid (1)
- Empfindlichkeit (1)
- Energie (1)
- Energy (1)
- Enteignung (1)
- Entgleisung (Zug) (1)
- Entrance (1)
- Entschädigung (1)
- Environmental impact analysis (1)
- Environmental protection (1)
- Epilepsie (1)
- Epilepsy (1)
- Epoxidharz (1)
- Epoxy resin (1)
- Erdarbeiten (1)
- Ernährung (1)
- Ersatzdroge (1)
- Erwachsener (1)
- Ethanol (1)
- Evaluation (1)
- Event data recorder (Road vehicle) (1)
- Experimental road (1)
- Expert system (1)
- Expertensystem (1)
- Explosion (1)
- Expressway (1)
- Expropriation (1)
- Face (human) (1)
- Facility (1)
- Fahrbahn (1)
- Fahrer ; Fahrerassistenzsystem (1)
- Fahrerinformationen (1)
- Fahrernacherziehung (1)
- Fahrlehrer (1)
- Fahrstreifen (1)
- Fahrzeugdach (1)
- Fahrzeugflotte (1)
- Fahrzeugteile (1)
- Failure (1)
- Fallstudie (1)
- Falschfahren (1)
- Fatigue (mech) (1)
- Fear (1)
- Fence (1)
- Fernsteuerung (1)
- Feuer (1)
- Fleet of vehicles (1)
- Flugsicherung (1)
- Flächennutzungsplan (1)
- Flächentragwerk (1)
- Food (1)
- Foot (not a measure) (1)
- Foreigner (1)
- Form (1)
- Forschung (1)
- Foundation (1)
- Friction (1)
- Fruchtsaft (1)
- Fruit (1)
- Fruit juice (1)
- Fuel tank (1)
- Furcht (1)
- Fuß (1)
- Führerschein Punktesystem (1)
- Führerscheinentzug (1)
- Gebiet (1)
- Gefahrenabwehr (1)
- Gehirn (1)
- Gelenkfahrzeug (1)
- Geländer (1)
- Geografisches Information System (1)
- Geographical information system (1)
- Geometry (shape) (1)
- Geophysic (1)
- Geophysik (1)
- Geradeausverkehr (1)
- Gesicht (1)
- Gesundheit (1)
- Gewicht (1)
- Glatteis (1)
- Glue (1)
- Greenhouse effect (1)
- Grunderwerb (1)
- Gründung (1)
- Guardrail (1)
- Gussasphalt (1)
- Haushalt (finanz) (1)
- Health (1)
- Heart (1)
- Heat (1)
- Heavy traffic (1)
- Height (1)
- Herausschleudern (1)
- Herz (1)
- Hip (human) (1)
- Hochfester Beton (1)
- Hochleistungsbeton (1)
- Homogeneity (1)
- Homogenität (1)
- Hospitsl (1)
- Human machine interface (1)
- Hängebrücke (1)
- Häufigkeit (1)
- Höhe (1)
- Hüfte (1)
- Image analysis (1)
- Image generation (1)
- Image processing (1)
- Impact (collision) (1)
- Impact study (environment) (1)
- In situ (1)
- Indemnity (1)
- Inertia reel safety belt (1)
- Infotainment System (1)
- Infotainment system (1)
- Injury) (1)
- Internet (1)
- Intersection (1)
- Intoxication (1)
- Inventar (1)
- Inventory (1)
- Ireland (1)
- Irland (1)
- Italien (1)
- Italy (1)
- Itinerary (1)
- Jahreszeit (1)
- Kabel (1)
- Katalyse (1)
- Klebstoff (1)
- Knochen (1)
- Kognitive Beeinträchtigung (1)
- Kohlendioxid (1)
- Kolmatierung (1)
- Komfort (1)
- Kommunikation (1)
- Konstruktion (1)
- Konzentration (1)
- Korea (Süd) (1)
- Korrelation [math (1)
- Kraftstofftank (1)
- Kragarm (1)
- Kreisverkehrsplatz (1)
- Kreuzung (1)
- Kunde (1)
- Körperhaltung (1)
- Körperstellung (1)
- Laboratorium (1)
- Laboratory (not an organization) (1)
- Land acquisition (1)
- Landslide (1)
- Landstraße (1)
- Lap strap (1)
- Lateral (1)
- Lateral collision (1)
- Law enforcement (1)
- Laying (1)
- Learning (1)
- Lebensdauer (1)
- Lebenszyklus (1)
- Leichnam (1)
- Leistungsfähigkeit (Allg.) (1)
- Level of service (1)
- Life cycle (1)
- Life cycle analysis (1)
- Linienführung (1)
- Links (1)
- Load capacity (1)
- Luftfahrzeug (1)
- Länge (1)
- Malaysia (1)
- Mass spectrometry (1)
- Massenspektrometrie (1)
- Massenunfall (1)
- Material (constr) (1)
- Materialveränderung (allg) (1)
- Mathematical Model (1)
- Matrix (1)
- Mean (math) (1)
- Mensch Maschine Schnittstelle (1)
- Text (1)
- Messgerät (1)
- Methanol (1)
- Minimum (1)
- Mittelstreifen (1)
- Modulus of elasticity (1)
- Moped (1)
- Motorisierungsgrad (1)
- Multiple collision (1)
- Nachhaltige Entwicklung (1)
- Nachrechnungsrichtlinie (1)
- Nachricht (1)
- Nachtrunk (1)
- Nasse Strasse (1)
- Nasse Straße (1)
- Network (traffic) (1)
- Neurologie (1)
- Neurology (1)
- Nigeria (1)
- Nordamerika (1)
- North America (1)
- Norway (1)
- Norwegen (1)
- Notfall (1)
- Nummer (1)
- Nutzwertanalyse (1)
- Oberbau (1)
- Obst (1)
- Official approval (1)
- Offset impact test (1)
- On the left (1)
- On the right (1)
- On the scene accident investigation (1)
- On the spot investigation (1)
- Optische Anzeige (1)
- Overturning (1)
- Oxygen (1)
- Padding (safety) (1)
- Parapet (1)
- Partnerschaft (1)
- Partnership (1)
- Passive restraint system (1)
- Pavement (1)
- Pfosten (1)
- Physiologie (1)
- Physiology (1)
- Platte (1)
- Point demerit system (1)
- Pole (1)
- Pollution (1)
- Polyurethan (1)
- Polyurethane (1)
- Population (1)
- Porous asphalt (1)
- Portable (1)
- Position (1)
- Precast concrete (1)
- Pregnancy (1)
- Prestressed concrete (1)
- Priority (traffic) (1)
- Privat (1)
- Private (1)
- Privatisation (1)
- Privatization (1)
- Probe (1)
- Prohibition (1)
- Protective helmet (1)
- Prototyp (1)
- Prototype (1)
- Prüfkörper (1)
- Pssives Sicherheitssystem (1)
- Public participation (1)
- QAccident (1)
- Quality management system (1)
- Qualitätsmanagementsystem (1)
- Radar (1)
- Radfahren (1)
- Radio (1)
- Rail bound transport (1)
- Rail traffic (1)
- Reaktionsfähigkeit (1)
- Rechts (1)
- Recidicist (1)
- Reconstruction [accid] (1)
- Reduction (decrease) (1)
- Regierung (Staat) (1)
- Region (1)
- Regional planning (1)
- Reibung (1)
- Reifen (1)
- Reinforced concrete (1)
- Reiseweg (1)
- Remote control (1)
- Republic of Corea (1)
- Research (1)
- Research projekt (1)
- Residential area (1)
- Resuscitation (1)
- Reversing (veh) (1)
- Rib (1)
- Richtlinie (1)
- Road pricing (1)
- Road transport (1)
- Road verge (1)
- Roadside (1)
- Robot (1)
- Roboter (1)
- Roll over (veh) (1)
- Roof (veh) (1)
- Rotation (1)
- Roundabout (1)
- Route guidance (1)
- Rsk (1)
- Run oo the road (accid) (1)
- Rundfunk (1)
- Rupture (1)
- Rural road (1)
- Rutschung (1)
- Röntgenstrahlung (1)
- Rücken (1)
- Rückfalltäter (1)
- Rückwärtsfahren (1)
- Safety harness (1)
- Safety system (1)
- Saftey (1)
- Salt (deicing) (1)
- Sauerstoff (1)
- Schall (1)
- Schallpegel (1)
- Schienentransport (1)
- Schienenverkehr (1)
- School (1)
- Schule (1)
- Schwangerschaft (1)
- Schweißen (1)
- Schweregrad (UNfall (1)
- Schwerverkehr (1)
- Schwingung (1)
- Schätzung (1)
- Sealing coat (on the top of the surfacing) (1)
- Season (1)
- Seat (1)
- Seat belt (1)
- Seat harness (1)
- Security (1)
- Sensitivity (1)
- Severity (accid, injuy) (1)
- Shell (struct) (1)
- Sicherheitspolsterung (1)
- Side (1)
- Signalization (1)
- Significance (1)
- Signifikanz (1)
- Silting (1)
- Slab (1)
- Slope (terrain) (1)
- Sound (1)
- Sound level (1)
- Span (1)
- Spannbeton (1)
- Spannung (mater) (1)
- Spannweite (1)
- Specification (Standard) (1)
- Speed) (1)
- Spinal calum (1)
- Sri Lanka (1)
- Stadtentwicklung (1)
- Stahlbeton (1)
- Standardabweichung (1)
- Statistik (math) (1)
- Stickoxide (1)
- Stiffeners (Bridge) (1)
- Stochastic process (1)
- Stochastischer Prozess (1)
- Stopping distance (1)
- Straight ahead (traffic) (1)
- Strasse (1)
- Straßenbenutzungsgebühr (1)
- Straßentransport (1)
- Stress (in material) (1)
- Subsequent drink (1)
- Substitution drugs (1)
- Suspension (chem) (1)
- Suspension (chem.) (1)
- Suspension bridge (1)
- Sustainable development (1)
- Tag (24 Stunden) (1)
- Tal (1)
- Tausalz (1)
- Tax (1)
- Technische Vorschriften (1)
- Technische Vorschriften (Kraftfahrzeug) (1)
- Technische Überwachung (allg) (1)
- Telecommunication (1)
- Telekommunikation (1)
- Telematics (1)
- Telematik (1)
- Temperatur (1)
- Temperature (1)
- Tension (1)
- Thailand (1)
- Tier (1)
- Tower (Bridge) (1)
- Tower (bridge) (1)
- Toxicit< (1)
- Toxizität (1)
- Traffic lane (1)
- Traffic restraint (1)
- Tragbar (1)
- Transparent (1)
- Transport (1)
- Transport operator (1)
- Transportunternehmen (1)
- Trapezförmiger träger (1)
- Traveler (1)
- Treibhauseffekt (1)
- Turning (1)
- Two dimensional (1)
- Tyre (1)
- Tätigkeitsbericht (1)
- Ultraviolet (1)
- Ultraviolett (1)
- Umgehungsstraße (1)
- Umhüllung (1)
- Umweltschutz (1)
- Underride prevention (1)
- Unfalldaten (1)
- Unfallfolgephase (1)
- Unfallrate (1)
- Unfallrekonsruktion (1)
- Unfallspurensicherung (1)
- Unfallverhuetung (1)
- Unfallverhütug (1)
- Ungeschützter Verkehrsteilnehmer (1)
- Unterfahrschutz (1)
- Untersuchung am Umfallort (1)
- Urban development (1)
- Urin (1)
- Urine (1)
- Usa (1)
- Valley (1)
- Value analysis (1)
- Variance analysis (1)
- Varianzanalyse (1)
- Vehicle ownership (1)
- Vehicle safety (1)
- Veletzung) (1)
- Verankerung (1)
- Verbot (1)
- Vereinigtes Königreichl (1)
- Verfahen (1)
- Verkehrsbeschränkung (1)
- Verkehrsnetz (1)
- Verkehrsqualität (1)
- Vermeidung (1)
- Verständnis (1)
- Verstärkung (Brücke) (1)
- Versuchsstrecke (1)
- Verteilung (allg) (1)
- Vertrag (1)
- Vertragspartner (1)
- Verwitterung (1)
- Verzögerung (1)
- Vibration (1)
- Visual display (1)
- Visualisation (1)
- Visualisierung (1)
- Vorfahrt (1)
- Vulnerable road user (1)
- Wasser (1)
- Water (1)
- Weathering (1)
- Weight (1)
- Window (veh) (1)
- Windschutzscheibe (1)
- Winter maintenance (1)
- Winterdienst (1)
- Wohngebiet (1)
- Women (1)
- Workplace (1)
- Wrong way driving (1)
- Wärme (1)
- Zahl (1)
- Zielführungssystem (1)
- Zinc (1)
- Zink (1)
- Zug (mech) (1)
- Zusammendrückung (1)
- ZusammenstoÃüï-¿-½Ãƒ-¯Ã‚-¿Ã‚-½ (1)
- Zustandsbwertung (1)
- Zweidimensional (1)
- accident (1)
- aktives Sicherheitssystem (1)
- analyses (math) (1)
- ar (1)
- efficiency (1)
- fatality (1)
- finite element method (1)
- head (1)
- road) (1)
- simulation (1)
- stat] (1)
- tödlicher Unfall (1)
- Ästhetik (1)
- Öffentlich Private Partnerschaft (1)
- Öffentliche Beteiligung (1)
- Ökosystem (1)
- Überrollung (1)
Brückenbauwerke sind unverzichtbarer Bestandteil unseres Straßennetzes. Sie ermöglichen die Überwindung von Tälern, Gewässern oder anderer Verkehrswege und stellen somit die eigentliche Funktion der überführten Straße sicher. Allein im Netz der Bundesfernstraßen gibt es derzeit 39.928 Brückenbauwerke(Stand 09/2020). Die meisten dieser Bauwerke sind bereits viele Jahrzehnte unter Verkehr. Ein großer Teil der bestehenden Spannbetonbrücken ist bereits 40 bis 60 Jahre alt. Die im Netz noch vorhandenen Gewölbebrücken aus Mauerwerk werden vielfach bereits deutlich über 100 Jahre genutzt.
Seither hat sich die Beanspruchung der Bauwerke durch drastisch gestiegene Fahrzeuggewichte und
Schwerverkehrsmengen im Vergleich zur ursprünglichen Planung grundlegend geändert. Gleichzeitig haben sich das Wissen um die Bauweisen, die Regeln zur Bemessung und konstruktiven Durchbildung und die Möglichkeiten zur Nutzung genauerer Berechnungsverfahren stark weiterentwickelt.
Mit der Nachrechnungsrichtlinie wird das Ziel verfolgt, Beanspruchungen und Tragwiderstände älterer Bauwerke möglichst wirklichkeitsnah zu ermitteln. Hierfür eröffnet die Richtlinie verschiedene Anpassungsmöglichkeiten bei den Einwirkungen, den Teilsicherheitsbeiwerten und den Bemessungsmodellen in Abhängigkeit der örtlichen und baulichen Gegebenheiten beziehungsweise unter Berücksichtigung kompensierender Maßnahmen.
In den letzten Jahren sind wesentliche Bausteine zur Ermittlung der Tragfähigkeit bestehender Massivbrücken unter Berücksichtigung der seinerzeit vorherrschenden Konstruktionsprinzipien weiterentwickelt worden. Darüber hinaus wurden die Nachrechnungslastmodelle vereinheitlicht und verfeinert.
Mit diesem Tagungsband sollen die neusten Entwicklungen, die die Basis für die 2. Auflage der Nachrechnungsrichtlinie
darstellen, und deren Mehrwert für die Anwendung in der Praxis nähergebracht werden. Nach einem allgemeinen Überblick zur Erhaltungsstrategie des Bundes werden zunächst die neusten Entwicklungen für die Nachrechnung bestehender Massivbrücken in sechs Beiträgen dargestellt. Die Themen reichen von Berechnungsansätzen für Querkraft und Torsion, über die rechnerische Berücksichtigung veralteter Bügelformen bei der Tragfähigkeitsbeurteilung von Spannbetonbrücken bis hin zu Nachrechnungsregeln für bestehende Gewölbebrücken aus Mauerwerk. In einem weiteren Themenblock werden in drei
Beiträgen künftige Neuerungen für Nachrechnungslastmodelle sowohl für die Berechnung im GZT als auch für die Nachweisführung gegen Ermüdung vorgestellt. Abschließend wird in zwei Beiträgen auf ausgewählte laufende Forschungsaktivitäten eingegangen.
An dieser Stelle sei allen Autoren gedankt, die mit ihren Vorträgen und ihren schriftlichen Beiträgen zum
Gelingen der Veranstaltung beigetragen haben.
Im europäischen aber auch weltweiten Vergleich befinden sich die deutschen Straßentunnel auf einem sehr hohen Sicherheitsniveau. Dies ist auch erforderlich, da Deutschland als Transitland in Eu-ropa über ein hoch belastetes Straßennetz verfügt. Tunnel stellen neuralgische Punkte in diesem Netz dar. Daher gilt es hier für den Nutzer ein Optimum an Sicherheit zu gewährleisten, gleichzeitig aber auch den Verkehrsfluss so gering wie möglich durch Wartungs- bzw. Sperrzeiten der Tunnelröhren zu behindern. Neben der Sicherheit und Verfügbarkeit wird erwartet, dass insbesondere auch die Themen Digitalisierung, Nachhaltigkeit und Wirtschaftlichkeit in der Zukunft den Tunnelbau- und Tunnelbetrieb (weiter) prägen werden.
Mit diesem Tagungsband sollen die neuesten Er-kenntnisse zu diesen Zukunftsthemen für die Ver-wendung in der alltäglichen Praxis nähergebracht werden.
Nach einem allgemeinen Überblick zum Stand von aktuellen Bau-, Instandsetzungs- und Nachrüs-tungsmaßnahmen im deutschen Fernstraßentunnelnetz wird im zweiten Themenblock, der den Be-trieb und die Erhaltung fokussiert, auf den Einsatz von BIM im Rahmen der Tunnelerhaltung sowie den Einfluss von Nutzungsdauern auf die Lebenszykluskosten von Tunneln eingegangen. Der Themenblock schließt mit der Vorstellung der geothermischen Nutzung von Bergwasser für einen nachhaltigen Betrieb am Grenztunnel Füssen.
Im Rahmen der Beiträge zum Themenblock „Erhöhung der Verfügbarkeit“, werden Konzepte vorge-stellt, die es ermöglichen die Verfügbarkeit im Ereignisfall zu optimieren sowie die gesamtwirtschaft-lichen Auswirkungen infolge von Modernisierungen beziehungsweise Erneuerungen strategisch zu berücksichtigen. Der letzte Beitrag in diesem Block stellt Ihnen das Ergebnis des Forschungsprojektes „RITUN – Resiliente Straßentunnel“ vor.
Abgerundet wird die Veranstaltung mit Praxisbeispielen zur Nachrüstung von Tunneln unter Verkehr. Am Engelbergbasistunnel bei Leonberg und am Rathaustunnel in Lüdenscheid wird die Bandbreite zu treffender Maßnahmen für die Aufrechterhaltung eines sicheren Verkehrsablaufs während umfang-reicher Ertüchtigungsarbeiten dargestellt.
An dieser Stelle sei allen Autoren gedankt, die zu dieser gelungenen Veranstaltung beigetragen haben.
Rekonstruktion des Bestandsplans im Zuge der Nachrechnung der Brücke über die Leine bei Schwarmstedt
(2019)
Der aktuell im Rahmen der Nachrechnungsrichtlinie geforderte Nachweis von Tragfähigkeit, Gebrauchstauglichkeit und Ermüdung der Brückenbauwerke im Bestand der Länder und des Bundes stellt eine enorme Herausforderung dar. Insbesondere bei unvollständigen oder fehlenden Bestandsplänen der Bauwerke sind Maßnahmen erforderlich, um die erforderlichen Informationen zu beschaffen. Ein wirkgungsvolles Instrument könne hierfür die zerstörungsfreien Prüfverfahren des Bauwesens sein. In dem präsentierten Forschungsprojekt erfolgte die Rekonstruktion eines Bestandsplanes direkt auf die Anforderungen des mit der Nachrechnung beauftragten Ingenieurbüros. Darüber hinaus wurde der Entwurf eines Leitfadens erstellt, der im Falle von unvollständigen oder fehlenden Bestandsplänen die Grundlagen für die Beauftragung und Durchführung der Nachrechnung schafft.
Innovative Zugangstechniken und digitale Bildauswertung für die Bauwerksprüfung im Zuge von Straßen
(2019)
Deutschland braucht ein zuverlässiges Straßenverkehrssystem. Dafür müssen die Zustände der Brücken und sonstigen Ingenieurbauwerke der Straßen kontinuierlich und umfassend bekannt um rechtzeitig handeln zu können. Neben der regulären visuellen Bauwerksprüfung nach DIN 1076 bieten neue innovative Verfahren große Möglichkeiten der Zugangs- sowie Bilderfassungs- und Bildverarbeitungstechnik. Diese Möglichkeiten gilt es jetzt systematisch zu erkunden und für den Einsatz aufzubereiten
Ein auf Nachhaltigkeit angelegtes Großprojekt wie das der Zustandserfassung und -bewertung (ZEB) bedarf eines Qualitätssicherungssystems. Hierfür wurde auf Initiative des Bundesministeriums für Verkehr, Bau- und Wohnungswesen (BMVBW) eine Untersuchung ausgelöst, über die die Grundlagen und Voraussetzungen für ein umfassendes QS-System erarbeitet werden sollen. In einer Pilotierungsphase soll im Jahr 2002 die Machbarkeit nachgewiesen werden.
Seit mehreren größeren Brandereignissen in Straßentunneln um die Jahrtausendwende wurde sowohl im baulichen Brandschutz als auch in der sicherheitstechnischen Tunnelausstattung viel getan. Zahlreiche technische Neu- und Weiterentwicklungen haben seither Eingang in Bau, Ausstattung und Betrieb der Bauwerke gefunden. Im europäischen aber auch weltweiten Vergleich befinden sich die deutschen Straßentunnel auf einem sehr hohen Sicherheitsniveau. Dies ist auch erforderlich, da Deutschland als Transitland in Europa über ein hoch belastetes Straßennetz verfügt. Tunnel stellen neuralgische Punkte in diesem Netz dar. Daher gilt es hier für den Nutzer ein Optimum an Sicherheit zu gewährleisten, gleichzeitig aber auch den Verkehrsfluss so gering wie möglich durch Wartungs- bzw. Sperrzeiten der Tunnelröhren zu behindern. Mit diesem Tagungsband sollen die neuesten Erkenntnisse sowohl zur Verkehrssicherheit in Tunneln, als auch zur bautechnischen Sicherheit für die Verwendung in der alltäglichen Praxis nähergebracht werden. Nach einem allgemeinen Überblick zum Stand von aktuellen Bau-, Instandsetzungs- und Nachrüstungsmaßnahmen im deutschen Fernstraßentunnelnetz erfolgt die Vorstellung zweier Forschungsprojekte der BASt, dem europäischen Projekt ECOROADS, welches die Harmonisierung zwischen Sicherheitsanforderungen auf freier Strecke und Tunnel zum Inhalt hat, und dem BASt-eigenen Modelltunnel, in dem längsneigungsabhängige, modellmaßstäbliche Rauchausbreitungsuntersuchungen vorgenommen wurden. Im zweiten Themenbereich, der die Grundlagen für Planung und Bau fokussiert, wird auf die Fortschreibung des betriebstechnischen Regelwerks, die Entwicklung von Kostenansätzen für Straßentunnel sowie auf planerische Herausforderungen im Rahmen des Großprojektes Fehmarnbeltquerung eingegangen. Im Themenschwerpunkt Tunnelbetrieb werden neue Erkenntnisse zur Belüftung von Straßentunneln bei Stau und den damit verbundenen Auswirkungen auf die Risikoanalyse vorgestellt. Außerdem gibt es ein Update zum Stand der Umsetzung des Pilotprojektes Tunnelsimulator aus zwei Bundesländern. Im Rahmen der Beiträge zu Instandsetzung und Nachrüstung von Straßentunneln wird dem aktuellen Thema des Umgangs mit Chloridbelastungen von Tunnelinnenschalen nachgegangen, sowie den Besonderheiten bei der Nachrüstung mehrerer Bestandstunnelbauwerke der Stadt Köln mit Schwerpunkt auf dem Stadtautobahntunnel Kalk. An dieser Stelle sei allen Autoren gedankt, die zu dieser gelungenen Veranstaltung beigetragen haben.
Interdisciplinary accident research and research projects of AARU Audi Accident Research Unit
(2017)
AARU (Audi Accident Research Unit) is an interdisciplinary research project of the University Hospital Regensburg in cooperation with AUDI AG. Specific objective is to comprehend the respective accident scenario and retrieve generally applicable findings as to technical, medical and psychological processes. In order to prevent traffic accidents and to alleviate vehicle accident consequences, postulates of general traffic safety, human-machine interaction, technical design and function of new vehicles and occupant as well as third party protection shall be inferred from these findings. Specifically, each accident with new Audi, Lamborghini and Ducati vehicles involved is analyzed interdisciplinary, discussed in a case meeting and anonymously documented with more than 2,000 parameters. The database is continually used for solving safety relevant issues. Parallel to accident analysis, research projects are performed in the fields medicine, psychology and engineering in order to gain comprehensive insight and identify potential additional areas of activity of accident research.
In 2016 the seventh ESAR conference (Expert Symposium on Accident Research) was held in Hannover. ESAR is an international convention of experts, who analyze traffic accidents all over the world and discuss their results in this context, conducted at the Medizinische Hochschule Hannover every 2 years. It connected representatives of public authorities, engineers in automotive development and scientists and offers a forum with particular emphasis on In-Depth-Analyses of accident statistics and accident analyses. Special focus is placed on research on the basis of so-called "In-Depth-Accident-Investigations" [data collections at the sites of the accidents], which are characterized by extensive documentations of the sites of the accidents, of the vehicles as well as of the injuries, encompassing several scientific fields. ESAR aims at a multi-disciplinary compilation of scientific results and at discussing them on an international, scientific level. It is thus a scientific colloquium and a platform for exchanging information for all accident researchers. Experiences in accident prevention as well as in the complex field of accident reconstruction are stated and new research fields are added. Existing results of long-term research work in Europe, the US, Australia and Japan include different infrastructural correlations and give findings on population, vehicle population and driver characteristics, which offer a basis for recommendations to be derived and measures for increasing road safety.
Recently, EuroNCAP updated the upper legform test protocols. The main objective of this study is to establish the upper legform test in KIDAS (Korean In-depth Accident Study) taking into account domestic pedestrian accident data as well as anthropometric data to protect elderly pedestrians whose average height and weight is much smaller and lighter than other age groups, especially compared to Europeans. Therefore 230 cases of pedestrian accidents from KIDAS were investigated to explore the injury severity of body regions as well as age related injury patterns. Injuries of all body regions were examined, with a special focus on injuries of abdomen and pelvic area. On the other hand, in order to explore Korea's pedestrian accident environment, national police data and KIDAS (Korean In-depth Accident Study) data were compared. The results should be taken into account in future analyses and possible improvements, such as regulations and KNCAP test protocols, of the pedestrian safety policy in Korea.
[Introduction:] A large number of road users involved in road traffic crashes recover from their injuries, but some of them never recover fully and suffer from some kind of permanent disability. In addition to loss of life or reduced quality of life, road accidents carry many and diverse consequences to the survivors such as legal implications, economic burden, job absences, need of care from a third person, home and vehicle adaptations as well as psychological consequences. Within an EU funded project MOVE/C4/SUB/2011-294/SI2.628846 (REHABIL AID) these consequences were analyzed more detailed.
Since its creation in 2011 the Pre-Crash-Matrix (PCM) offers the possibility to observe the pre-crash phase until five seconds before crash for a wide range of accidents. Currently the PCM contains more than 8.000 reconstructed accidents out of the GIDAS (German In-Depth Accident Study) database and is enlarged continuously by more than 1.000 cases per year. Hence, a detailed investigation of active safety systems in real accident situations has been made feasible. The PCM contains all relevant data in database format to simulate the pre-crash phase until the first collision of the accident for a maximum of two participants. This includes the definition of the participants and their characteristics, the dynamic behavior of the participants as time-dependent course for five seconds before crash as well as the geometry of the traffic infrastructure. The digital sketch of the accident and information from GIDAS as well as from supplementary databases represent the main input for the simulation of the pre-crash phase of an accident with the VUFO simulation model VAST (Vufo Accident Simulation Tool). This simulation in turn embodies the foundation of the PCM. The PCM underlies continual improvements and enhancements in consultation with its users. In addition to collisions of cars with other cars, pedestrians, bicycles and motorcycles the PCM now also covers car to object and car to truck collisions. The paper illustrates car to truck collisions as a showcase and explains perspectives for further developments. In 2016 a more detailed definition of the contour of the vehicle was added. Furthermore, the geometrical surroundings of the accident site will be provided in a new structure with a higher level of detail. Thus, a precise classification of road marks and objects is possible to further improve the support of developing and evaluating ADAS. This paper gives an overview about the latest developments of the PCM with its innovations and provides an outlook to upcoming enhancements. Besides potential areas of application for the development of ADAS are shown.
While cyclists and pedestrians are known to be at significant risk for severe injuries when exposed to road traffic accidents (RTAs) involving trucks, little is known about RTA injury risk for truck drivers. The objective of this study is to analyze the injury severity in truck drivers following RTAs. Between 1999 and 2008 the Hannover Medical School Accident Research Unit prospectively documented 43,000 RTAs involving 582 trucks. Injury severity including the abbreviated injury scale (AIS) and the maximum abbreviated injury scale (MAIS) were analyzed. Technical parameters (e.g. delta-v, direction of impact), the location of accident, and its dependency on the road type were also taken into consideration. The results show that the safety of truck drivers is assured by their vehicles, the consequence being that the risk of becoming injured is likely to be low. However, the legs especially are at high risk for severe injuries during RTAs. This probability increases in the instance of a collision with another truck. Nevertheless, in RTAs involving trucks and regular passenger vehicles, the other party is in higher risk of injury.
The proportion of older road users is increasing because of demographic change (in the group 65+ from current 18% to about 24% by 2030). The mobility needs of people 65+ often differ from those of younger people. Seniors (65+) are already more involved in fatal accidents than younger road users. According to the age development, the senior share of road deaths in the EU of today is increasing nearly one-fifth to one-third. From the in-depth analysis of accidents generic simulation models were developed. Attention has been paid both to psycho-physical characteristics as well as on the social and physical environment and their specifics in conjunction with seniors. By simulating the defined scenarios and varying the defined relevant parameters, accident influencing factors were examined as a basis for avoidance. In addition, the parameters were varied to show the influence from the vehicle, the pedestrian and the infrastructure to avoid the accident or to characterize the conditions for which the accident is inevitable.
Causation of traffic accidents with children from the perspective of all involved participants
(2017)
In the year 2014 about 2,800 children between zero and 14 years got injured due to traffic accidents in Austria. More than 50% were taking part in traffic as active road users like cyclists or pedestrians. Within this study 46 real world traffic accidents between vehicles and children as pedestrians were analysed. In 39 cases, car drivers hit the crossing children. In the other cases, the collision opponents were busses, trucks or motorcycles. Most of the children got hit while crossing a road at urban sites. By analysing the traffic accidents from the perspectives of all involved participants, vehicle drivers and injured children, it is possible to identify factors for each participant, which led to the accident and factors that contributed the accident. The main task is to find patterns in the behaviour of crash victims (children and driver) before the collision. One important fact is that in more than 50% of the analysed cases sight obstructions were an important contributing factor for both, the driver and the child. From drivers view situations in which the child moved unexpected into the driven road lane were often found. For the injured child, factors like: no attention to the road traffic or no sufficient traffic observation were found to be relevant. Further it- possible to sensitise children and adults to possible source of critical traffic situations according to the findings of this study.
For more than a decade, ADAC accident researchers have analysed road accidents with severe injuries, recording some 20,000 accidents. An important task in accident research is to determine the causative factors of road accidents. Apart from vehicle engineering and human factors, accident research also focuses on infrastructural and environmental aspects. To find out what accident scenarios are the most common in ADAC accident research and what driver assistance systems can prevent them, our first task was to conduct a detailed accident analysis. Using CarMaker, we performed a realistic simulation of accident scenarios, including crashes, with varying parameters. To begin with, we made an initial selection of driver assistance systems in order to determine those with the greatest accident prevention potential. One important finding of this study is that the safety potential of the individual driver assistance systems can actually be examined. It also turned out that active safety offers even much more potential for development and innovation than passive safety. At the same time, testing becomes more demanding, too, as new systems keep entering the market, many of them differing in functional details. ADAC will continue to test all driver assistance systems as realistically as possible so as to be able to provide advice to car buyers. Therefore, it will be essential to develop and improve test conditions and criteria.
At IAM RoadSmart we share the excitement about autonomous cars " who wouldn't! However over half of the drivers we polled supported concentrating on making drivers safer " among IAM RoadSmart members it was 70%. Driverless cars are still years away but delivering safer drivers can help reduce death and injury from tomorrow. Governments, academics and car makers need to work hard to convince sceptical British and American drivers that autonomous cars can deliver the benefits promised such as a 90% plus reduction in road deaths.
Still correlated with high mortality rates in traffic accidents traumatic aortic ruptures were frequently detected in unprotected car occupants in the early years. This biomechanical analysis investigates the different kinds of injury mechanisms leading to traumatic aortic injuries in todays traffic accidents and how the way of traffic participation affects the frequency of those injuries over the years. Based on GIDAS reported traffic accidents from 1973 to 2014 are analyzed. Results show that traumatic aortic injuries are mainly observed in high-speed accidents with high body deceleration and direct load force to the chest. Mostly chest compression is responsible for the load direction to the cardiac vessels. The main observed load vector is from caudal-ventral and from ventral solely, but also force impact from left and right side and in roll-over events with chest compression lead to traumatic aortic injuries. Classically, the injury appeares at the junction between the well-fixed aortic arch and the pars decendens following a kind of a scoop mechanism, a few cases with a hyperflexion mechanism are also described. In our analysis the deceleration effect alone never led to an aortic rupture. Comparing the past 40 years aortic injuries shift from unprotected car occupants to today's unprotected vulnerable road users like pedestrians, cyclists and motorcyclists. Still the accident characteristics are linked with chest compression force under high speed impact, no seatbelt and direct body impact.
In this study, the mean profile depth (MPD) that expresses roughness of road pavements was calculated using the road survey equipment vehicle and the calculated MPD was compared with the real number of traffic accidents. The analysis method used in this study was to classify the appropriate clustering in relation to traffic accidents using the K-means clustering and to compare this with the presence of traffic accidents via the MPDs to derive the result. K-means clustering was used in the analysis method and four clusters were found using the clustering analysis results. The center of each cluster was 0.627, 0.850, 1.118, and 1.237, respectively. The result of this study is expected to be utilized as foundational research in the traffic safety area.
For the avoidance of traffic accidents by means of advanced driver assistance systems the knowledge of failures and deficiencies a few seconds before the crash is of increasing importance. This information e.g. is collected in the German accident survey GIDAS by an interview derived from the ACAS methodology. However to display the whole range of accident causation factors additional information is needed on enduring factors of the system components "human", "infrastructure" and "machine". On the strategic level these accident moderating factors include long term influences such as medical preconditions or a general higher risk taking behavior as well as influences on the immediate conflict level such as an aggressive response to a perceived previous traffic conflict. This study was conducted to examine the feasibility of collecting such causation information in the scope of an in-depth accident investigation like GIDAS. Due to the comprehensive amount of information necessary to estimate the moderating factors the collection of the information is distributed to different methods. 5 cases of real world crashes have been investigated where information was collected on-scene and retrospective by interviews. The identified moderating factors of the accidents and the method for collecting the information are displayed.
The advent of active safety systems calls for the development of appropriate testing methods. These methods aim to assess the effectivity of active safety systems based on criteria such as their capability to avoid accidents or lower impact speeds and thus mitigate the injury severity. For prospective effectivity studies, simulation becomes an important tool that needs valid models not only to simulate driving dynamics and safety systems, but also to resolve the collision mechanics. This paper presents an impact model which is based on solving momentum conservation equations and uses it in an effectivity study of a generic collision mitigation system in reconstructed real accidents at junctions. The model assumes an infinitely short crash duration and computes output parameters such as post-crash velocities, delta-v, force directions, etc. and is applicable for all impact collision configurations such as oblique, excentric collisions. Requiring only very little computational effort, the model is especially useful for effectivity studies where large numbers of simulations are necessary. Validation of the model is done by comparison with results from the widely used reconstruction software PC-Crash. Vehicles involved in the accidents are virtually equipped with a collision mitigation system for junctions using the software X-RATE, and the simulations (referred to as system simulations) are started sufficiently early before the collision occurred. In order to assess the effectivity, the real accident (referred to as baseline) is compared with the system simulations by computing the reduction of the impact speeds and delta-v.
In-depth accident investigation offers many advantages for the analysis and comprehension of crash mechanisms. IFSTTAR makes such investigations since 1992 without interruption. The corresponding database contains more than 1200 accident case studies. Currently, in-depth accident investigation is one of the best ways to determine the speed or cars involved in accidents. This paper first presents the methods used for accident investigation and for accident kinematic reconstruction. Then, in order to illustrate the interest and possible applications of such accident data, it shows some results from a recent study based on the IFSTTAR in-depth accident study programme (IDAS) and dealing with the link between travelling speed and accident risk.
When assessing the consequences of accidents normally the injury severity and the damage costs are considered. The injury severity is either expressed within the police categories (slight injury, severe injury or fatal injury) or the AIS code that rates the fatality risk of a given injury. Both injury metrics are assessing the consequences of the accident directly after the accident. However, not all consequences of accidents are visible directly after the accident and the duration of the consequences are different. Besides a physiological reduction of functionality social and psychological implications such as reduced mobility options, problems to continue the original job etc. are happening. In order to assess long term consequences of accidents the MHH Accident Research Unit established a brief questionnaire that is distributed to accident involved people of the Hannover subset of the GIDAS data set approx. one year after the accident beginning with the accident year 2013. The basic idea of using a brief questionnaire (in fact only one page) is to obtain a relatively large return rate because the questionnaire appears to be simple and quickly answered. This appears to be important because it is believed that the majority of accident involved people will not report long term consequences. In order to allow a more detailed survey amongst those responders that are reporting long term consequences they are asked for a written consent for the additional questionnaire that will be distributed at a time that is not yet defined. Long term consequences are reported for all addressed areas, medical, physiological, psychological and sociological by people without injuries, with minor injuries and with severe injuries.
This paper gives an overview of the in-depth crash investigation activity conducted by the Centre for Automotive Safety Research (CASR) at the University of Adelaide, in South Australia. Recent changes in method include: an expansion in on-call hours for the crash investigation team, providing the option of a phone interview for crash participants to discuss the crash, and downloading objective crash data from vehicle airbag control modules. These changes have resulted in: increased representativeness of crashes by hour of day; a decrease in the over-representation of fatal crashes in our sample; an increase in the proportion of crashes that involved a pedestrian, bicycle or scooter (moped); an increase in the proportion of crash participants consenting to an interview; and an increase in the objective data available, through airbag control module downloads. Our in-depth crash investigations enabled research into road departures that found barriers were a more feasible solution than clear zones for eliminating serious and fatal injury resulting from run off road crashes.
The incidence of side impacts was investigated from GIDAS data. Both vehicle-fixed object and vehicle-vehicle collisions were analysed as these are enclosed within the consumer testing program. Vehicle-fixed object collisions were stratified according to ESC availability. Results indicated that vehicles equipped with ESC rarely have pure-lateral impacts. An increase in oblique collisions was seen for the vehicles with ESC whereby most vehicle were driving in left curves. The analysis of vehicle-vehicle collisions developed injury risk curves were developed at the AIS3+ injury severity for the vehicle-vehicle side impacts. Results suggested that greatest injury risk occurred when a Pre Euro NCAP vehicle was struck by a Post Euro-NCAP vehicle. The remaining curves did not show different behaviour, indicating that stiffness increased have been equally combated. This was attributable to the few Post Euro-NCAP vehicles that had a deployed curtain airbag available in the sample. The integration of Euro NCAP testing has shown to improve vehicle crashworthiness for pole collisions, as those vehicles with ESC rarely incur lateral impacts.
Cyclists are more likely to be injured in fatal crashes than motorised vehicles. To gain detailed and precise behavioural data of road users, i.e. trajectories, a measuring campaign was conducted. Therefore, a black-spot for accidents with cyclists in Berlin, Germany was selected. The traffic has been detected by a fully automated traffic video analysis system continuously for twelve hours. The video surveillance system is capable of automatically extracting trajectories, classifying road user types and precise determining and positioning of conflicts and accidents. Additionally, pre-conflict and pre-accident situations could be analysed to provide further in-depth understanding of accident causation. The evaluation of the measuring campaign comprised the investigation of traffic parameters, e.g. traffic flow, as well as traffic-safety related parameters based on Surrogate Safety Measures (SSM). Furthermore, the spatial and temporal distributions of conflicts involving cyclists were determined. As a result, three possible conflict clusters could be identified, of which one cluster could be confirmed by detailed video analysis, showing conflicts caused by right turning vehicles.
Car occupants have a high level of mortality in road accidents, since passenger cars are the prevalent mode of transport. In 2013, car occupant fatalities accounted for 45% of all road accident fatalities in the EU. The objective of this research is the analysis of basic road safety parameters related to car occupants in the European countries over a period of 10 years (2004-2013), through the exploitation of the EU CARE database with disaggregate data on road accidents. Data from the EU Injury Database for the period 2005 - 2008 are used to identify injury patterns, and additional insight into accident causation for car occupants is offered through the use of in-depth accident data from the EC SafetyNet project Accident Causation System (SNACS). The results of the analysis allow for a better understanding of the car occupants' safety situation in Europe, thus providing useful support to decision makers working for the improvement of road safety level in Europe.
The Swedish "Vision Zero" regards road fatalities and severe injuries as unacceptable. The vision is based on this ethical perspective together with a fundament of shared responsibility between the system designers and the road user. The design of the traffic system shall protect the road user from these effects as long as he or she follows the traffic rules. It should be possible to make a mistake without being killed. This policy has, during the first period of the "vision zero" (since 1997) put high priority on road and car design where the purpose has been to develop a forgiving environment. Gradually it has, however, become clear that much more effort has to be focused on the responsibility of the road user. Protecting measures will have limited effect as long as the understanding and acceptance from road users is limited. During the last years, Sweden has gone through several improvements of the driver education and is in the middle of important improvements of road safety education for children in schools. Several EU-projects has contributed to this development. One aspect that has received large international interest is the lay instructed driver training from 16 years of age supervised by parents. This has been in use since 1993. Another is the development of mandatory courses, such as an introduction for the learner and the lay instructor, a "risk awareness" courses dealing specifically with speeding, seat belt use, drunk driving, tiredness, and driving on low friction. The presentation will share some of the "vision zero" fundaments together with the latest experiences, research and development concerning driver education in Sweden.
To elucidate the risk of pedestrians, bicycle and motorbike users, data of two accident research units from 1999 to 2014 were analysed in regard to demographic data, collision details, preclinical and clinical data using SPSS. 14.295 injured vulnerable road users were included. 92 out of 3610 pedestrians ("P", 2.5%), 90 out of 8307 bicyclists ("B", 1.1%) and 115 out of 4094 motorcycle users ("M", 2.8%) were diagnosed with spinal fractures. Thoracic fractures were most frequent ahead of lumbar and cervical fractures. Car collisions were most frequent mechanism (68, 62 and 36%). MAIS was 3.8, 2.8 and 3.2 for P, B and A with ISS 32, 16 and 23. AIS-head was 2.2, 1.3 and 1.5). Vulnerable road users are at significant risk for spine fractures. These are often associated with severe additional injuries, e.g. the head and a very high overall trauma severity (polytrauma).
Although road infrastructure is developed extensively Brazil is still one of the countries with the most dangerous roads in the world. In order to stop the increasing trend of traffic fatalities of the last few years and to improve traffic safety on Brazilian roads a pilot study on behalf of SAE Brazil started in March 2016 with the goal to lay the foundations for a long-term research activity. Piloting for an in-depth accident investigation the city of Campinas, roughly 100 km north of São Paulo was chosen. The pilot project was carried out with the local partner, the Empresa Municipal de Desenvolvimento de Campinas (EMDEC). The paper reports on the initial training of evidence based accident data collection on-spot, the implementation of the new digital database, the data collection and the first results. An outlook on the planned long-term accident investigations is given.
In this study, we compared the injury severity of occupants according to the seating position and the crashing direction in motor vehicle accidents. In the driver's point of view, it was separated the seating position as "Near-side" and "Far-side". The study subjects were targeted by people who visited 4 regional emergency centers following motor vehicle accidents. Real-world investigation was performed by direct and indirect methods after patient- consent. The information of the damaged vehicle was informed by Collision Deformation Classification (CDC) code and the information of the injury of patients was informed by using the Abbreviated Injury Score (AIS) and Injury Severity Score (ISS). When the column 3 in CDC code was P, damaged at the middle part of lateral side, the average point of AIS 3 was 1.91-±1.72 in near-side and 1.02-±1.31 in far-side (p<0.01). The average point of maximum AIS (MAIS) was 2.78-±1.39 in near-side and 2.02-±1.11 in far-side (p<0.01). The average point of ISS was 15.74-±14.71 in near-side and 8.11-±8.39 in far-side (p<0.01). Also, when the column 3 in CDC code was D, damaged at the whole part of lateral side, it was significant that the average point of AIS 3 and MAIS in near-side was bigger than in far-side (p=0.02).
A study on knowledge and practices of first aid and CPR among police officers in Colombo and Gampaha
(2017)
Around 85% of deaths in developing countries have been found to be due to road traffic accidents (RTAs), which cost the countries around 1-2% of their gross national product (GNP). In Sri Lanka there were 2,436 deaths reported from 36,045 RTAs in 2014. This study aimed at assessing first aid and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) knowledge among police officers and identifying its relationship to their first aid and CPR practices. A study was done on 493 police officers from Colombo and Gampaha who were selected using convenience sampling through a self-administered questionnaire. The results showed that the police officers had unsatisfactory knowledge and practices of CPR and interventions for bleeding and fractures. These should therefore be focused in their further training.
Injury probability functions for pedestrians and bicyclists based on real-world accident data
(2017)
The paper is focusing on the modelling of injury severity probabilities, often called as Injury Risk Functions (IRF). These are mathematical functions describing the probability for a defined population and for possible explanatory factors (variables) to sustain a certain injury severity. Injury risk functions are becoming more and more important as basis for the assessment of automotive safety systems. They contribute to the understanding of injury mechanisms, (prospective) evaluation of safety systems and definition of protection criteria or are used within regulation and/or consumer ratings. In all cases, knowledge about the correlation between mechanical behavior and injury severity is needed. IRFs are often based on biomechanical data. This paper is focusing on the derivation of injury probability models from real world accident data of the GIDAS database (German In-depth Accident Study). In contrast to most academic terms there is no explicit term definition or definition of creation processes existing for injury probability models based on empirical data. Different approaches are existing for such kind of models in the field of accident research. There is a need for harmonization in terms of the used methods and data as well as the handling with the existing challenges. These are preparation of the dataset, model assumptions, censored/unknown data, evaluation of model accuracy, definition of dependent and independent variable, and others. In the presented study, several empirical, statistical and phenomenological approaches were analyzed regarding their advantages and disadvantages and also their applicability. Furthermore, the identification of appropriate prediction parameters for the injury severity of pedestrians has been considered. Due to its main effect on injuries of pedestrians and bicyclists, the importance of the secondary impact has also been analyzed. Finally, the model accuracy, evaluated by several criteria, is the rating factor that gives the quality and reliability for application of the resulting models. After the investigation and evaluation of statistical approaches one method was chosen and appropriate prediction variables were examined. Finally, all findings were summarized and injury risk functions for pedestrians in real world accidents were created. Additionally, the paper gives instructions for the interpretation and usage of such functions. The presented results include IRFs for several injury severity levels and age groups. The presented models are based on a high amount of real world accidents and describe very well the injury severity probability of pedestrians and bicyclists in frontal collisions with current vehicles. The functions can serve as basis for the evaluation of effectiveness of systems like Pedestrian-AEB or Bicycle-AEB.
DURNER würdigt in seinem einleitenden Beitrag den langjährigen Vorsitzenden des Arbeitskreis Straßenrecht Prof. Dr. Willi Blümel, der am 22. August 2015 verstarb. Willi Blümel hatte die Geschäfte des 1958 gegründeten Arbeitskreises im Jahr 1976 von Prof. Klaus Obermayer übernommen und den Kreis bis 2006 " also über drei Jahrzehnte " geleitet und in einzigartiger Weise geprägt. HILLGRUBER untersucht die Vereinbarkeit der Einführung einer Infrastrukturabgabe für Kraftfahrzeuge mit einem zulässigen Gesamtgewicht von bis zu 3,5 Tonnen auf dem deutschen Bundesfernstraßennetz mit dem Recht der Europäischen Union. Nach seiner Auffassung stellt eine solche Abgabe auch in der Kombination mit entsprechenden Freigrenzen bei der Kfz-Steuer, in deren Genuss tatsächlich nur Halter von im Inland zugelassenen Kfz kommen, keine mittelbare Diskriminierung aus Gründen der Staatsangehörigkeit dar. Ebenso verstoße das Vorhaben weder gegen Art. 92 AEUV noch gegen die Grundfreiheiten oder das allgemeine Diskriminierungsverbot des Art. 18 Abs. 1 AEUV. LINKE behandelt neue Entwicklungen bei öffentlich-privaten Partnerschaften im Bereich der Bundesfernstraßen. Solche Projekte seien zwar nicht unumstritten, ermöglichten jedoch eine schnellere und effizientere Umsetzung von notwendigen Straßenbaumaßnahmen. Das Bundesministerium für Verkehr und digitale Infrastruktur setzte sich daher für weitere öffentlich-private Partnerschaften im Bundesfernstraßenbereich ein. Der analytische Beitrag von HELD untersucht umweltrechtliche Verfahrensfehler im Lichte der neuesten Rechtsprechung. Die durch ihn untersuchten Vorgaben der UVP-Richtlinie und der Aarhus-Konvention verlangen nach Anpassungen des nationalen Verwaltungsprozessrechts. Diese Anpassungen können unter weitgehender Beibehaltung des überkommenen Systems des Individualrechtsschutzes durch eine Erweiterung der Verbandsklagebefugnis erbracht werden. Der abschließende Beitrag von DEUTSCH untersucht die aktuelle Bedeutung der europäischen Umweltfachplanungen fär das Straßenrecht am Beispiel der Luftreinhalte- und Lärmaktionsplanung. Er gelangt zu dem Befund, dass die rechtlichen Zusammenhänge zwischen Umweltfachplanungen und Vollzug und damit auch im Verhältnis zum Straßen- und Straßenverkehrsrecht in vieler Hinsicht noch der Klärung und Justierung bedürfen. Klärungsbedürftig sei insbesondere die Frage, unter welchen Voraussetzungen und mit welcher Reichweite die Träger der Umweltfachplanung die Zuständigkeiten der Vollzugsbehörden an sich ziehen dürfen.
Powered Two Wheeler (Motorcycle) crashes are overrepresented in EU, England, and United States casualty statistics for both fatal and serious injuries. While regional geographic differences are evident for motorcycle size, type, and engine displacement, the casualty statistics consistently indicate significantly higher injury rates for all motorcycle riders when compared to car occupants. Accident analysis and reconstruction of these motorcycle crashes is a necessary process to gain further understanding of potential injury mitigation strategies. This paper focuses on the analysis of the rider post impact trajectory in the immediate moments following a crash. The rider and motorcycle, while loosely coupled by seating position leading up to a crash, quickly decouple as the crash forces develop. As a result, the rider moves relative to the motorcycle and relative to the collision partner. This movement, or trajectory, is primarily influenced by the type and configuration of the impact, the type and configuration of the motorcycle and collision partner, and the speeds involved. Understanding the rider's post impact trajectory will assist in the development of injury mitigation strategies. Both the free flight trajectory of the rider and the rider's trajectory as influenced by interaction with the motorcycle and collision partner are examined. Rider trajectories in full scale crash testing and real world motorcycle crashes are both studied and presented. The resulting physical evidence that can be observed by an accident analyst is discussed. The application of projectile motion physics is analyzed and the necessary input parameters, such as initial launch angle, are studied. This study will assist in understanding the post-impact dynamics of a motorcyclist, and will provide useful information to analysts evaluating real world crashes.
Bus or heavy vehicle passenger accidents are rare events, compared with car accidents, but sometimes leads to a large number of victims especially in rollover crash scenarios. Two accidents occurred in Portugal in 2007 and 2013 in which 28 people died and more than 50 are injured, shown the importance of the investigation of such accidents. For the investigation of these accidents multidisciplinary teams are constituted with engineers and police officers. All the factors involved are taken into consideration including road design, traffic signs, maintenance and hardware, human factors, and vehicle factors. In this work a methodology to an accurate collection of the data is proposed. From the information collected the accident is reconstructed using the PC-CrashTM software. From this all the contribution factors are determined and recommendations to mitigate these crashes are listed. These two accidents are rollover accidents and the analysis of the injuries and its correlation with the use of retention systems is very important. From the medical data and with the dynamics of the accident determined simulations of the occupants with biomechanical models are carried out in order to evaluate the effect of the retention systems in the injuries. This analysis is based on injury criteria (such as Abbreviated Injury Score (AIS) or Injury Severity Scale (ISS)). With this it is possible to determine if the seat belt was worn or not.
For the determination of the road surface roughness common methods have been established, like Skid Resistance Tester (SRT) or the Sideway-force Coefficient Routine Investigation Machine (SCRIM). Both methods are used to measure a comparable and reliable maximum friction potential value and to assess the quality of the road surface. However, the comparison of the measurements under real conditions and the results of measurements with SRT and SCRIM showed only minor correlations. The paper shows the comparison between these standardised methods and real vehicle braking tests and discusses the results.
The objectives of this paper are the analysis of the accident risk of drivers brain pathologies (Mild Cognitive Impairment, Alzheimer- disease, and Parkinson- disease), and the investigation of the impact of driver distraction on the accident risk of patients with brain pathologies, through a driving simulator experiment. The three groups of patients are compared to a healthy group of similar demographics, with no brain pathology. In particular, 125 drivers of more than 55 years old (34 "controls"" and 91 "patients") went through a large driving simulator experimental process, in which incidents were scheduled to occur. They drove in rural and urban areas, in low and high traffic volumes and in three distraction conditions (undistracted driving, conversation with a passenger and conversation through a mobile phone). The statistical analyses indicated several interesting findings; brain pathologies affect significantly accident risk and distraction affects more the groups of patients than the control one.
Motorcycle crashes in Austria: Analysis of causes and contributing factors based on in-depth data
(2017)
From CEDATU, the in-depth accident database run by the Vehicle Safety Institute at Graz University of Technology, a representative sample of 101 crashes involving at least one motorcycle was selected. The analysis focused on causes for crashes as well as on contributing factors, but also included parameters of road, riders and vehicles. Own riding speed and "unexpectable action by another road user" were the most frequent causes for accidents. Inappropriate safety distance or delayed reaction were frequent, both as causation factors and as contributing factors. Infrastructure issues never cause an accident, but they are very frequent as contributing factors; road geometry and road guidance are by far most frequent among these. This paper also discusses accidents by type and other parameters (e.g. injury severity by body region, collision speed, age and others), and compares accident causes to previous studies as well as the police reported accident statistics.
The Decision Support System (DSS) is one of the key objectives of the European co-funded research project SafetyCube in order to better support evidence-based policy making. Results will be assembled in the form of a DSS that will present for each suggested road safety measure: details of risk factor tackled, measure, best estimate of casualty reduction effectiveness, cost-benefit evaluation and analytic background. The development of the DSS presents a great potential to further support decision making at local, regional, national and international level, aiming to fill in the current gap of comparable measures effectiveness evaluation. In order to provide policy-makers and industry with comprehensive and well-structured information about measures, it is essential that a systems approach is used to ensure the links between risk factors and all relevant safety measures are made fully visible. The DSS is intended to become a major source of information for industry, policy-makers and the wider road safety community.
In most of developed countries, the progress made in passive safety during the last three decades allowed to drastically reduce the number of killed and severely injured especially for occupants of passenger cars. This reduction is mainly observed for frontal impacts for which the AIS3+ injuries has been reduced about 52% for drivers and 38% for front passengers. The stiffening of the cars' structure coupled with the generalization of airbags and the improvement of the seatbelt restraint (load limiter, pretension, etc.) allowed to protect vital body regions such as head, neck and thorax. However, the abdomen did not take advantage with so much success of this progress. The objective of this study is to draw up an inventory on the abdominal injuries of the belted car occupants involved in frontal impact, to present adapted counter-measures and to assess their potential effectiveness. In the first part the stakes corresponding to the abdominal injuries will be defined according to types of impact, seat location, occupants' age and type of injured organs. Then, we shall focus on the abdominal injury risk curves for adults involved in frontal impact and on the comparisons of the average risks according to the seat location. In the second part we will list counter-measures and we shall calculate their effectiveness. The method of case control will be used in order to estimate odds ratio, comparing two samples, given by occupants having or not having the studied safety system. For this study, two type of data sources are used: national road injured accident census and retrospective in-depth accident data collection. Abdominal injuries are mainly observed in frontal impact (52%). Fatal or severe abdominal occupant- injuries are observed at least in 27% of cases, ranking this body region as the most injured just after the thorax (51%). In spite of a twice lower occupation rate in the back seats compared to the front seats, the number of persons sustaining abdominal injuries at the rear place is higher than in the front place. In recent cars, the risk of having a serious or fatal abdominal injury in a frontal impact is 1.6% for the driver, 3.6% for the front passenger and 6.3% for the rear occupants. The most frequently hurt organs are the small intestine (17%), the spleen (16%) and the liver (13%). The most common countermeasures have a good efficiency in the reduction of the abdominal injuries for the adults: the stiffness of the structure of the seats allows decreasing the abdominal injury risk from 54% (driver) to 60% (front occupant), the seatbelt pretensioners decrease also this risk from 90% (driver) to 83% (front passenger).
Driver distraction
(2017)
This report for the Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM) summarises recent research and knowledge from scientific studies about distracted driving. The report defines what it means to be "distracted" when driving, discusses the impact of distraction on driver behaviour and safety, and what can be done to reduce distracted driving. The focus of distraction discussed here relates to how drivers engage with technology when driving. The report begins with a background to driver distraction, followed by discussion about what is actually meant by driver distraction. It is then considered why humans cannot successfully do two things at the same time, particularly within the context of driving. The subsequent section summarises the scientific research findings to date with regard to driver distraction and technology, and how this affects different types of road user. Recommendations for how driver distraction can be mitigated in the real world and a summary conclude the report. Responses to common questions raised by drivers are presented in Appendix A.
This work describes the results of the experimental activity, illustrating the driving behavior observed in different conditions, relating them to the different methods of ADAS intervention and comparing the driver behavior without ADAS. In the present study, driver behavior was studied in road accidents involving elderly pedestrians, with different ADAS HMIs, as a base to develop a driver model in near missing pedestrian accidents. A literature research was conducted with the aim of finding out the main influencing factors, including environment, boundary conditions, configuration of impact, pedestrian and driver information, when pedestrian fatalities occur and an analysis of frequent road accidents was conducted to get more detailed information about the driver- behavior. In order to obtain more detailed information about pedestrian accidents, real road accidents were reconstructed with multibody simulations on PC-Crash and, by the comparison between literature findings and reconstructions, a generic accident scenario was defined. The generic accident scenario was implemented on the full scale dynamic driving simulator in use at the Laboratory for Safety and Traffic Accident Analysis (LaSIS, University of Florence, Italy) in order to analyse the driving behaviors of volunteers, also considering the influence of ADAS devices. Forty-five young volunteers were enrolled for this study, resulting in forty valid tests on different testing scenarios. Two different scenarios consisted in driving with or without ADAS in the vehicle. Different kinds of ADAS, acoustic and optical, with different time of intervention were tested in order to study the different reactions of the driver. The tests showed some interesting differences between driver's behavior when approaching the critical situation. Drivers with ADAS reacted earlier, but more slowly, depending also on the type of alarm, and often with double reaction when braking. In fact, the results of the activity showed that with ADAS intervention the time to collision (TTC) increases, but the reaction time and braking modality change: a) there is a sort of "latency" time between the accelerator pedal release and the brake pressure; b) the brake pressure is initially less intense. So the driver only partially takes advance from the TTC increase. These differences were valued not only qualitatively, but quantitatively as well. This work revealed to be useful to improve the knowledge of drivers" behavior, in order to realize a driver model that can be implemented to help attaining and assessing higher levels of automation through new technology.
From an automotive safety occupant protection standpoint, effective occupant restraint requires a system capable of providing non-injurious occupant ride down of anticipated crash forces. This is not only the case for frontal collisions, where occupant restraint is provided primarily by seatbelts and airbags, but is also critical for other crash modes such as side impacts, rear impacts, rollovers, as well as multiple impact events. In the rear impact crash mode, occupant restraint is provided primarily by the seatbacks and to some extent the seatbelts. Foundationally, therefore, what becomes fundamental to the seatback's role in rear occupant protection is its ability to contain the occupant within the seat, preventing occupant ramping, as well as preventing the seat's, and/or its occupant's, dangerous intrusion into the rear occupant's survival space where contact with rear compartment components and/ or rear seated occupants can present a significant injury risk. An analysis is presented of a series of rear impact sled testing conducted by the authors that evaluates the timing, position and extent of the front seatback's reward displacement toward and into the rear occupant compartment as well as consideration of the front seat occupant' ramping potential and its injury potential relative to the rear compartment. Additionally, three other series of testing are presented which assess various seat designs occupant retention capabilities. Lastly, a matched-pair comparison test series is presented which evaluates occupant motion in rear impact with and without use of a typical vehicle body mounted 3-point seatbelt. Discussion of restraint system performance observed in all the testing is included along with ATD biofidelity and thigh-gap considerations. The data collected and presented includes accelerometer instrumentation and high speed video analysis.
Twenty-eight percent of traffic accidents in Japan are rear-end collisions, and of these, 13% are multiple collisions (three or more vehicles and/or roadside objects). A post-crash braking system enables the driver to stop the vehicle in a short distance after a rear-end collision to prevent secondary collisions. In this study, the effectiveness of a post-crash braking system was examined using a drive recorder database. In 64% of rear-end collisions, the driver's braking was interrupted after the collision. The stopping distance was estimated with time data from the drive recorder. We predict that the brake assist would be effective in preventing secondary collisions in 21% of cases.
Whiplash injuries are characterized by the high variability of its symptoms and by the subjectivity of its diagnosis, which sometimes leads to frauds perpetrated by victims of rear-end impacts. It is estimated that whiplash injuries cost annually about 10.000 million Euros in Europe. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the influence of the dynamics of the accident in which the victim was involved in the probability of development of whiplash associated injuries. In the presented methodology, first an accident reconstruction is performed where the dynamics of the accident is determined. This is carried out using the software PC-Crash, police and insurance companies' data. Then biomechanical injuries criteria related with whiplash injuries are evaluated. For the evaluation of the probability of having whiplash injuries, the Neck Injury Criterion (NIC) of the victim and the mean acceleration of the vehicle were evaluated. Then, with medical reports, the results of the accident reconstruction are correlated with the reported injuries. Some examples are presented. The results obtained indicate that the study of the dynamics of the road accidents in which the victims were involved could be used as an auxiliary of the prognosis of whiplash injuries and is important for a precise diagnosis of this type of injuries.
This study investigates the protection offered by passive head-restraints with different stiffness and energy dissipation properties. For this purpose, computational multi-body models of a generic car seat and a biofidelic 50thpercentile male human for rear impact are used to study different seat designs and passive head-restraints. The validated seat-occupant model is also used in the design of two different car-seat models which are shown to effectively mitigate whiplash by utilising a crash-energy distribution technique. Five different passive head-restraints with varying stiffness (low-medium-high) and energy dissipation percentages (low-high) are successively attached to four different car-seat models. The simulation results indicate that the protection offered by head restraints is strongly dependent on the seat design. It has also been shown that the stiffness of the passive head-restraint has much more influence on whiplash-risk in comparison to its energy dissipation capacity.
Millions of kilometers are driven and recorded by car manufacturers and researchers every year to gather information about realistic traffic situations. The focus of these studies is often the recording of critical situations to create test scenarios for the development of new systems before introducing them into the market. This paper shows a novel Analysis and Investigation Method for All Traffic Scenarios (AIMATS) based on real traffic scenes. It also shows how to get detailed information about speeds, trajectories and behavior of all participants without driving thousands of kilometers at the example of conflict situations with animals. Basis of the AIMATS is the identification of the most relevant locations as "Points of Interest" (POI), the recording of the critical situations and their "base lines" at these POI. This paper presents a new method to identify critical scenarios involving both vehicles and animals as well as preliminary results of a study done in Saxony using this new method.
HORN stellt in ihrem Eingangsreferat den "Neuen Bundesverkehrswegeplan und die SUP in der Verkehrswegeplanung" vor. Das zentrale Element des in der Regel auf 10 bis 15 Jahre angelegten Plans ist die aus europäischen Vorgaben abgeleitete Öffentlichkeitsbeteiligung. Diese erfordert bei der Erstellung des Bundesverkehrswegeplans einen kontinuierlichen Kommunikationsprozess. Zugleich betonte HORN die starke Unterfinanzierung des aktuellen Plans. Der Erhaltung der vorhandenen Verkehrsinfrastruktur komme in den Bereichen Straße, Schiene und Wasser der Vorrang vor Neubauten zu. FEHLING plädiert in seinem Beitrag "Die Straße im Kontext des öffentlichen Personennahverkehrs" für eine nahverkehrsfreundliche Planung und Gestaltung des Straßenraums. Die Planungen verschiedener Verkehrsträger und Planungsebenen müssten aufeinander aber auch mit straßenverkehrsrechtlichen Anordnungen abgestimmt werden. Die entsprechende Koordination sei allerdings verbesserungsbedürftig. Namentlich die Vernetzung der Nahverkehrsplanung mit anderen Planungsebenen müsse ausgebaut werden. KUGELE berichtet in seinem Beitrag "Selbstfinanzierte Straßen" für eine längerfristige Verlässlichkeit der Verkehrsfinanzierung. Gegenwärtig fließe nur etwa die Hälfte der Abgaben aus dem Verkehr dem Gesamtverkehrssystem auch wieder zu. Diese Mittel müssten gesteigert und längerfristig für den Verkehr verfügbar gemacht werden, etwa durch längerfristige Leistungs- und Finanzierungsvereinbarungen oder durch Sondervermögen. Der abschließende Beitrag "Das neue Vergaberecht" von SIEGEL behandelt drei neue EU-Vergaberichtlinien, die am 17.04.2014 in Kraft getreten und nun binnen zweier Jahre umzusetzen sind. Nach dem neuen Recht können künftig ökologische und soziale Kriterien verstärkt eine Rolle bei der Vergabe von öffentlichen Aufträgen spielen. Diese neuen Richtlinien vergrößern indes die Nachweispflichten und den bürokratischen Aufwand. Neben das Kriterium des "wirtschaftlich günstigsten Angebots" zählt zudem nunmehr auch das beste Preis-Leistungs-Verhältnis.
In 2014 the sixth ESAR conference (Expert Symposium on Accident Research) was held in Hannover. ESAR is an international convention of experts, who analyze traffic accidents all over the world and discuss their results in this context, conducted at the Medizinische Hochschule Hannover every 2 years. It connected representatives of public authorities, engineers in automotive development and scientists and offers a forum with particular emphasis on In-Depth-Analyses of accident statistics and accident analyses. Special focus is placed on research on the basis of so-called "In-Depth-Accident-Investigations" [data collections at the sites of the accidents], which are characterized by extensive documentations of the sites of the accidents, of the vehicles as well as of the injuries, encompassing several scientific fields. ESAR aims at a multi-disciplinary compilation of scientific results and at discussing them on an international, scientific level. It is thus a scientific colloquium and a platform for exchanging information for all accident researchers. Experiences in accident prevention as well as in the complex field of accident reconstruction are stated and new research fields are added. Existing results of long-term research work in Europe, the US, Australia and Japan include different infrastructural correlations and give findings on population, vehicle population and driver characteristics, which offer a basis for recommendations to be derived and measures for increasing road safety.
Injury severity of e.g. pedestrians or bikers after crashes with cars that are reversing is almost unknown. However, crash victims of these injuries can frequently be seen in emergency departments and account for a large amount of patients every year. The objective of this study is to analyze injury severity of patients that were crashed into by reversing cars. The Hannover Medical School local accident research unit prospectively documented 43,000 road traffic accidents including 234 crashes involving reversing cars. Injury severity including the abbreviated injury scale (AIS) and the maximum abbreviated injury scale (MAIS) was analyzed as well as the location of the accident. As a result 234 accidents were included into this study. Pedestrians were injured in 141 crashes followed by 70 accidents involving bikers. The mean age of all crash victims was 57 -± 23 years. Most injuries took place on straight stretches (n = 81) as well as parking areas (n = 59), entries (n = 36) or crossroads (n = 24). The AIS of the lower extremities was highest followed by the upper extremities. The AIS of the neck was lowest. The mean MAIS was 1.3 -± 0.6. The paper concludes that the lower extremities show the highest risk to become injured during accidents with reversing cars. However, the risk of severe injuries is likely low.
Detailed anthropometric data of pregnant women have been collected and used in the development of a computational model of the pregnant occupant model "Expecting". The model is complete with a finite element uterus and multi-body fetus, which is a novel feature in the models of this kind. The computational pregnant occupant model has been validated and used to simulate a range of impacts. The strains developed in the utero-placental interface are used as the main criteria for fetus safety. Stress distributions due to inertial loading of the fetus on the utero-placental interface play a role on the strain levels. Inclusion of fetus model is shown to significantly affect the strain levels in the utero-placental interface. This series of studies has led to the design of seatbelt features specifically for the pregnant women to enable them use the seatbelt correctly and comfortably.
The current Brussels EU Regulation No. 1235/2011, valid from May 30, 2012, has introduced an European Tyre Label with wet grip index G classes from A to G for passenger car tyres C1, light commercial vehicles tyres C2 and heavy truck- and bus tyres C3. Every wet grip class for each vehicle category has a defined band of numerical values for the wet grip index G. The legislated wet grip values G in this EU- Regulation are very low. The measured braking distances and corresponding impact speeds of the test vehicles are showing very critical results. Regulation No. 1235/2011 of the European Parliament and the Council for Type Approval of Vehicles (EU) should be changed in such a way, that for C1-tyres (normal passenger cars tyres) the minimum wet grip index G is 1.25. All C2-tyres (light commercial vehicles tyres) should at least meet a minimum wet grip index of G = 1.1. All C3-tyres (heavy trucks and buses tyres) should at least meet a minimum wet grip index of G = 0.95. Due to the missing lower limits for G in the wet grip class F for C1, C2 and C3 tyres according to Commission Regulation (EU) No. 1235/2011, officially valid from 30 May 2012, a tyre-to-road coefficient of adhesion in the extreme of 0 (zero) is legally permitted. This is an apparent flaw in above cited EU Regulation, which causes a potential danger to the road traffic safety for all motor vehicles in Europe with such tyres. The wet grip class F has to be removed urgently from said EURegulation, since a direct liability of the responsible EU-Commission can not be excluded.
This work aimed for getting the main features of accidents involving Light Goods Vehicles (LGV), using accident cases collected in the In-Depth Accidents Studies built up at IFSTTAR-LMA (France), in order to analyse thoroughly the proceedings of these accidents and identify the major factors for the different types of LGV. This work was based on the analysis of 88 accident cases involving LGV with a Maximum Authorised Mass inferior to 3.5 tonnes. In particular kinematics reconstruction of these accidents were performed to calculate the average impact speeds and to better understand the compatibility problems between LGV and antagonist vehicles. Specific features have been reviewed to pick up problems concerning safety, maintenance, loading, LGV design: general conditions of the accident, vehicle features, and passive safety. The main results of this study are presented in this paper.
Vorgestellt werden Ergebnisse aus der Untersuchung "Vergleich verschiedener Modellierungsprogramme zur Berechnung von Luftschadstoffen". Die Untersuchung wurde begleitend zu der Pilotstudie "NO2-Reduktion an Ti02-dotierten Lärmschutzwänden (LSW) an der A1" durchgeführt. Projektziel war der Vergleich von drei Ausbreitungsmodellen sowie die Auswahl eines geeigneten Modells für ein zu entwickelndes Online-Monitoring-System. Es wurde festgestellt, dass sich die Modellergebnisse infolge der Umsetzung kleinräumiger Details unterscheiden sowie dass alle Modelle lediglich geringe NOx-Minderungen in Folge der katalytischen Oberflächenbeschichtung anzeigen. In den numerischen Modellen wird die photokatalytische Wirkung der Ti02-beschichteten Lärmschutzwand über einen Depositionsprozess berücksichtigt. Unter Berücksichtigung der Hintergrundbelastung und der NOx-NO2-Umwandlung würde sich die Wirkung des Katalysators im Maximum auf weniger reduzieren. Die Messungen zeigten keine eindeutige Wirkung bezüglich der Immissionskonzentrationen im Bereich der beschichteten beziehungsweise unbeschichteten LSW an.
While it is important to track trends in the number of road accidents in different countries using national statistics, there is a need for data with more detailed information, so called in-depth accident data. For this reason, several accident data projects emerged worldwide in recent years. However, also different data standards were established and so comparative analysis of international in-depth data has been very hard to conduct, so far. This is why the project iGLAD (Initiative for the Global Harmonization of Accident Data) was established and created the prerequisites for building up a standardized dataset out of the common denominator of different in-depth accident databases from Europe, USA and Asia. In the first phase, the project received funding from ACEA to compile an initial database. To accomplish this, a suitable data scheme has been defined, a pilot study has been conducted as proof of concept and the recoding of the first common data base has been initiated. Also, to prepare the project for its self-supporting continuation in the next years, a business model has been developed. This paper reports the history and status of the project, the current challenges and the creation of a capable consortium to maintain the data. In mid-2014, the initial database containing 1550 cases from 10 different countries will be completed and a first detailed view on this data will be possible.
Introduction: The method of causation analysis applied under the German accident survey GIDAS, which is based on Accident Causation Analysis System (ACAS) focuses on an on-scene data collection of predominantly directly event-related causation factors which were crucial in the accident emergence as situational resulting events and influences. The paradigm underlying this method refers to the findings of the psychological traffic accident research that most causally relevant features of the system components human, infrastructure and vehicle technology are found directly in the situation shortly before the accident. This justifies the survey method which is conducted directly at the accident (on-scene), shortly after the accident occurrence (in-time) with the detection of human-related causes (in-depth). Human aspects of the situation analysis that interact and influence the risk situations shortly before the collision are reported as errors, lapses, mistakes and failures in ACAS in specific categories and subcategories. Thus methodically ACAS is designed primarily for the collection of accident features on the level of operational action, which certainly leads to valid findings and behavioral causes of accidents. The enhancement by means of Moderating Conditions concerns the pre-crash phase in different levels: strategical, tactical and operational.
Road accidents are typically analyzed to address influences of human, vehicle, and environmental (primarily infrastructure) factors. A new methodology, based on a "Venn diagram" analysis, gives a broader perspective on the probable factors, and combinations of factors, contributing both to the occurrence of a crash and to sustaining injuries in that crash. The methodology was applied to 214 accidents on the Mumbai-Pune expressway. Factors contributing to accidents and injuries were addressed. The major human factors influencing accidents on this roadway were speeding (30%) and falling asleep (29%), while injuries were primarily due to lack of seat belt use (46%). The leading infrastructure factor for injuries was impact with a roadside manmade structure (28%), and the main vehicle factor for injuries was passenger compartment intrusion (73%). This methodology can help identify effective vehicle and infrastructure-related solutions for preventing accidents and mitigating injuries in India.
The project UR:BAN "Cognitive assistance (KA)" aims at developing future assistance systems providing improved performance in complex city traffic. New state-of-the-art panoramic sensor technologies now allow comprehensive monitoring and evaluation of the vehicle environment. In order to improve protection of vulnerable road users such as pedestrians and cyclists, a particular objective of UR:BAN is the evaluation and prediction of their behaviour and actions. The objective of subproject "WER" is development support by providing quantitative estimates of traffic collisions at the very start and predict potential in terms of optimized accident avoidance and reduction of injury severity. For this purpose an integrated computer simulation toolkit is being devised based on real world accidents (GIDAS as well as video documented accidents), allowing the prediction of potential effectiveness and future benefit of assistance systems in this accident scenario. Subsequently, this toolkit may be used for optimizing the design of implemented assistance systems for improved effectiveness.
Ruptures and dissections of the thoracic and abdominal aortic vessel caused by traffic accidents are rare but potentially life-threatening injuries. They can occur by blunt trauma via seat belt or dashboard injury. The study aimed at evaluating the overall mortality, morbidity, neurological disorders, and differences in operative procedures of open repair and stenting. It shows that, with a change and improvement in diagnostic tools and surgical approach, mortality and morbidity of blunt aortic injuries were significantly reduced. Still an immediate life-threatening injury early diagnosis via multiple-slice and scans and surgical repair with minimally invasive stents showed excellent short-time results for selected patients.
This study aimed at prediction of long bone fractures and assessment of lower extremity injury mechanisms in real world passenger car to pedestrian collision. For this purpose, two pedestrian accident cases with detail recorded lower limb injuries were reconstructed via combining MBS (Multi-body system) and FE (Finite element) methods. The code of PC Crash was used to determine the boundary conditions before collision, and then MBS models were used to reproduce the pedestrian kinematics and injuries during crash. Furthermore, a validated lower limb FE model was chosen to conduct reconstruction of injuries and prediction of long bone fracture via physical parameters of von Mises stress and bending moment. The injury outcomes from simulations were compared with hospital recorded injury data and the same long bone fracture patterns and positions can be observed. Moreover, the calculated long bone fracture tolerance corresponded to the outcome from cadaver tests. The result shows that FE model is capable to reproduce the dynamic injury process and is an effective tool to predict the risk of long bone fractures.
India is one of the leading countries reporting highest road accidents & related injuries. TMARG (Tata Motors Accident Research Group) has been recording crashes in association with M/s. Lokamanya Medical Foundation since 2011 with M/s, Amandeep Hospitals since Aug 2013. This study has highlighted some accident types not discussed extensively in literature. Trucks to Truck impacts " Cabin interaction with overhanging loadbody structures and Offset underside impacts for passenger vehicles are seen in significant numbers. The paper discusses these in more detail including severity.
Anwendungsmöglichkeiten und erste Ergebnisse aus Pilotstudien zur Photokatalyse an Straßenbauwerken
(2015)
Zur Frage, ob photokatalytisch aktive Oberflächen im Straßenbau eine Lösung des Stickoxidproblems darstellen können, stellt der Beitrag erste Ergebnisse aus Pilotstudien zu TiO2-Anwendungen vor. Diese betreffen die Untersuchung einer Lärmschutzwand mit TiO2-Beschichtung (A1, Niedersachsen), eine photokatalytisch aktive Straßenoberfläche (NOxer(R)-Belag, B433 in Hamburg, Decke mit Ti02-haltiger Zementschlämme, derzeit noch in Auswertung) sowie einen Tunnel (Tunnelkassetten mit TiO2-Matten im Tunnel Rudower Höhe in Berlin, A113, fortgeführt in Bezug auf die Untersuchung der Haltbarkeit der Kassettensysteme). Ausführlich dargestellt werden die Untersuchungen zur Beschichtung der Lärmschutzwand an der Al mit Titandioxid-haltiger Suspension, den zugehörigen forschungsbegleitenden Studien, sowie den Ergebnissen in Bezug auf die NO2-Minderungsrate. Die bisher durchgeführten Auswertungen haben NO2-Minderungen von einstelligen Prozentzahlen ergeben. Die Entwicklung der Minderungsraten lässt vermuten, dass photokatalytische Suspensionen zum Teil mehrere Monate benötigen, um sich frei zu brennen und die aktiven TiO2-Partikel an die Oberfläche treten zu lassen. Schon die Lärmschutzwand allein bewirkt eine deutliche Verminderung der NO2-Konzentrationen im direkten Hinterland durch Verfrachtung der Luftschadstoffe in höhere Luftschichten.
This study aimed at comparing head Wrap Around Distance (WAD) of Vulnerable Road User (VRU) obtained from the German in-depth Accident Database (GIDAS), the China in-depth Accident Database (CIDAS) and the Japanese in-depth Accident Database (ITARDA micro). Cumulative distribution of WAD of pedestrian and cyclist were obtained for each database (AIS2+) showing that WAD of cyclists were larger than the ones of pedestrians. Comparing three regions, the 50%tile WAD of GIDAS was larger than that of both Asian accident databases. Using linear regression that might predict WAD of pedestrians and cyclists from Impact speed and VRU height, WADs were calculated to be 206cm/219cm (Pedestrian/Cyclist) for GIDAS, 170cm/192cm for CIDAS and 211cm/235cm for ITARDA. In addition, this study may be helpful for reconsideration of WAD measurement alignment between accident reconstruction and test procedures.
The declining trend since 1991 in the number of killed people was broken in 2011 when overall 4 009 people died in traffic accidents in Germany. The question arises if there is a stagnating trend of fatalities in Germany in future? By breaking down the accidents with casualties towards a monthly view one can see a decreasing trend of fatalities in the warmer months especially since 2009. When comparing against winter months higher deviations are observed. In December 2011 an increase of 191 traffic deaths were registered (181 in 2010 compared to 372 in 2011). Further analyses of different accident influences were evaluated and their possibility of drastic change from one year to the other was determined. As seen weather- and environmental conditions are one of the major contributing factors and are one of the causes for the increased number of fatalities. To support the underlying assumption a model had been created to calculate the number of traffic deaths on a daily basis approach. As an input, road conditions projected through weather parameters and also different driving behaviors on weekdays or holidays were used. As a result, estimates of daily fatality with up to 75% precision can be achieved out of the 2009, 2010 and 2011 data. Further on it shows that weather and street conditions have a high influence on the overall resulting number of traffic accidents with casualties, and especially to the number of fatalities. Hence it is estimated that approximately 3 300 people were killed in traffic accidents in Germany in 2013 which would be again a reduction of another 13% compared to 2012. Therefore an answer to the question will be that the decreasing trend in traffic fatalities in Germany somehow is not broken when environmental conditions are included in national statistics. Their effects will become more visible in future accident statistics and it is estimated variances of 5% to 8% of the annual number of traffic fatalities in Germany will be seen.
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.
For the estimation of the benefit and effect of innovative Driver Assistance Systems (DAS) on the collision positions and by association on the accident severity, together with the economic benefit, it becomes necessary to simulate and evaluate a variety of virtual accidents with different start values (e.g. initial speed). Taken into account the effort necessary for a manual reconstruction, only an automated crash computation can be considered for this task. This paper explains the development of an automated crash computation based on GIDAS. The focus will be on the design of the virtual vehicle models, the method of the crash computation as well as exemplary applications of the automated crash computation. For the first time an automated crash computation of passenger car accidents has been realized. Using the automated crash computation different tasks within the field of vehicle safety can be elaborated. This includes, for example, the calculation of specific accident parameters (such as EES or delta-V) for various accident constellations and the estimation of the economic benefit of DAS using IRFs (Injury Risk Functions).
Pedestrians represent about 20% of the overall fatalities in Europe- road traffic accidents. In this paper a methodology is proposed to understand why the numbers are so high, especially in the south of Europe and particularly in Portugal, . First a detailed statistical analysis using Ordinal Logistic Regression model (OLR) was applied to the gathered data from all Portuguese accidents with victims in the period 2010-2012. In a second stage accident reconstruction computational techniques using pedestrian biomechanical models are used to evaluate the accident conditions that lead to the injuries, such as the speed and the impact location. For biomechanical injury criterions, the AIS (Abbreviated Injury Scale), the HIC (Head Injury Criterion) and other injury criterions based on the resulting accelerations in the pedestrian's body are used. The statistical model reported that there were several predictors that significantly influenced the pedestrian injury severity in the event of a road accident, such as Pedestrian's age, Pedestrian's gender, Vehicle Design/Category or Driver's gender. The use of injury scales and biomechanical criterions in in-depth investigation of road accidents, such as AIS, can significantly improve the quality of the reconstruction process.
Vorgestellt werden Vorgehensweise, Datenaufbereitung, Modellaufbau und Ergebnisse des BASt-Projekts "Numerische Simulation der Stickoxidminderung durch photokatalytische Oberflächen an Verkehrswegen". Die Vorteile des Konzepts liegen in der Berücksichtigung von Zeitreihen (Eingangsdaten, Ausbreitungsrechnung) und in der Tatsache, dass die Depositionsgeschwindigkeit als zeitlich variable Eingangsgröße bei der Modellierung berücksichtigt wurde. Die Ergebnisse liegen entsprechend als Zeitreihen vor (Jahres- oder Tagesgänge können untersucht werden). Es ergab sich eine Minderung der NO2-Belastung um maximal knapp 1.5% im Nahbereich der Lärmschutzwand. Wesentlicher Faktor bei der Wirksamkeit photokatalytischer Oberflächen ist die Interaktion zwischen Gesamtbelastung und Depositionsgeschwindigkeit im Tagesverlauf.
The paper gives an overview of the recent (mostly 2012) figures of killed bus/coach occupants (drivers and passengers) in 27 Member States of the European Union as reported by CARE. The Evolution of the figures of bus/coach occupants killed in road accidents urban, rural without motorway and on motorways from 1991 to 2010 in 15 Member States of the EU supplements this information. More detailed are the figures reported for Germany by the Federal Statistics. The paper displays long-term evaluations (1957 to 2012) for killed, seriously and slightly injured occupants in all kinds of buses/coaches. Midterm evaluations (1995 to 2012) of the figures of fatalities and casualties are displayed for different busses according to their identification of road using as coaches, urban buses, school buses, trolley buses and "other buses". To be able to compare the evolutions of the safety of vehicle occupants it is customary to use different risk indicators. Calculations and illustrations for three often used indicators with their development over time are given: fatalities, seriously injured and slightly injured per 100,000 vehicles registered, per 1 billion (109) vehicle-kilometres travelled and per 1 billion (109) person-kilometres. These indicators are shown for occupants of cars, goods vehicles and buses/coaches. For the period from 1957 until 2012 it is obvious, that for all three vehicle categories analysed there was a clear long-term trend towards more occupant safety in terms of casualties per vehicles registered and per vehicle mileage. This was most significant for car occupants but it can be seen for bus/coach occupants and goodsvehicle occupants as well. Figures of killed occupants and of casualties related to person-kilometres are calculated and displayed for the shorter period 1995 to 2012. Here it becomes obvious that the bus/coach is still the safest mode of transport for the occupants of road vehicles. Graphs for the casualty risk indices still show significantly higher risks for car occupants despite the corresponding curve moved sustainable downwards. It is remarkable, that the risks of being killed or injured for the occupants of urban buses is growing whereas the corresponding risk for the occupants of coaches in line traffic tends downwards. The article ends with a short comparison and discussion of the risk indicators which are actually published for the occupants (driver and passengers) of cars and the passengers of buses/coaches, railroads, trams and airplanes. The interpretation of such information depends on the perception and it seems that for a complete view not only one indicator should be used and the evolutions of the indicator values during longer periods (as displayed with examples in the paper) should also be taken into account.
Within the COST Action TU1101 the working group WG 1 is dealing with acceptance criteria and problems in helmet use while bicycling concerning conspicuity, thermal stress, ventilation deficits and other potential confounding. To analyze the helmet usage practice of bicyclists in Europe a questionnaire was developed in the scope of working group 1 to collect relevant information by means of a field study. The questionnaire consists of some 66 questions covering the fields of personal data of the cyclist, riding und helmet usage habits, information concerning the helmet model and the sensation of the helmet, as well as information on previous bicycle accidents. A second complementary study is conducted to analyze if the use of a bicycle helmet influences the seating geometry and the posture of cyclists when riding a bicycle and if the if the helmet vertically limits the vision. For this purpose cyclists with and without helmets were photographed in real world situations and relevant geometrical values such as the decline of the torso, the head posture of the upper vertical vision limit due to the helmet were established from the photos. The interim results of the field studies which were conducted in Germany by the Hannover Medical School are presented in this study. Some 227 questionnaires were filled out, of which 67 participants had used a helmet and 42 of the 227 participants have had a bicycle accident before. For the analysis of the riding position and posture of the cyclist over 40 pictures of riders with a helmet and over 240 pictures of riders without a helmet were measured concerning the seating geometry to describe the influence of using a bicycle helmet. Some results in summary: From the riders interviewed with the questionnaire only 11% of the city bike riders and 12% of the mountain bike riders always used the helmet, while 38% of the racing bike riders and 88% of the e-bike-riders always used the helmet. The helmet use seems not to change the sensation of safety of cycling compared to the use of a car. The arguments for not wearing a helmet are mostly stated to be the short distance of a trip, high temperatures or carelessness and waste of time. The reasons for using a helmet are stated to be the feeling of safety and being used to using a helmet. Being a role model for others was also stated to be a reason for helmet use. Concerning the sensation of the helmet 9% of the riders reported problems with the field of vision when using a helmet, 57% saw the problem of sweating too much, and 10% reported headaches or other unpleasant symptoms like pressure on the forehead when using the helmet. The analysis of the seating posture from the pictures taken of cyclists revealed that older cyclists generally have a riding position where the handle bar is higher than the seat (0-° to 10-° incline from seat to handlebar), while younger riders had a higher variance (between -10-° decline and 20-° incline). Further, elderly riders and riders with helmets seem to have a more upright position of the upper body when cycling. The vertical vision limit due to the helmet is determined by the front rim of the helmet (mostly the sun shade). Typical values here range from 0-° (horizontal line from the eye to the sun shade) to 75-° upwards, in which elderly riders tend to have a slightly higher vertical vision limit possibly due to the helmet being worn more towards the face.
Although the annual traffic accident statistics published by the national police is available in public, the detailed traffic accident data has not been released in Korea. Recently the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport recognized the importance of in-depth accident data to enhance road traffic safety and initiated a research project to establish a collection of the detailed accident data. The main objective of the project is a feasibility study to establish KIDAS (Korea In-Depth Accident Study). Within this project, three university hospitals which are located in mid-size cities have been selected to collect accident data. Annually, more than 500 cases of accidents have been collected from the in-patient's interviews and diagnosis. Unlike GIDAS (German In-Depth Accident Study), currently on-site investigation can"t be performed by the Korean police. The only available data is patient medical records, patient's description of accident circumstances and the damaged vehicle. Occasionally the police provide the accident investigation reports containing very brief information on accident causation and vehicle safety. In a first step, the concept of KIDAS is to adopt the format of iGLAD (Initiative for the Global Harmonization of Accident Data) for harmonization. Since the currently collected accident information is extremely limited compared with GIDAS, the other sources of data and calculations such as KNCAP vehicle data, pc-crash simulations, vehicle registration information, insurance company data are utilized to complete the iGLAD template. Results from KIDAS_iGLAD and the cases of assessment of active safety devices such as AEBS, ESC, and LDWS will be evaluated.
Since a number of human models have been developed it appears sensible to use these models also in the accident analysis. Especially the understanding of injury mechanisms and probably even injury risk curves can be significantly improved when interesting accidents are reconstructed using human body models. However, an important limitation for utilising human models for accident reconstruction is the effort needed to develop detailed FE models of the accident partners or to prepare the human model reconstruction by running physical accident reconstructions. The proposed approach for using human models for accident reconstruction is to use simplified and parametric car models. These models can be adapted to the crash opponents in a fast and cost effective way. Although, accuracy is less compared to detailed FE models, the relevant change in velocity can be simulated well, indicating that the computation of a detailed crash pulse is not needed. Two frontal impact test accidents that were reconstructed experimentally and using the parametric car models are indicating sufficient correlation of the adapted parametric car models with the full scale crash reconstructions. However, further developments of the parametric models to be capable for the use in lateral impacts and rear impacts are needed. For the PC Crash simulation runs the output sampling rate is too large to allow sufficient analysis. In addition the performance appears to be too general.
The main focus of the benefit estimation of advanced safety systems with a warning interface by simulation is on the driver. The driver is the only link between the algorithm of the safety system and the vehicle, which makes the setup of a driver model for such simulations very important. This paper describes an approach for the use of a statistical driver model in simulation. It also gives an outlook on further work on this topic. The build-up process of the model suffices with a distribution of reaction times and a distribution of reaction intensities. Both were combined in different scenarios for every driver. Each scenario has then a specific probability to occur. To use the statistical driver model, every accident scene has to be simulated with each driver scenario (combinations of reaction times and intensities). The results of the simulations are then combined regarding the probabilities to occur, which leads to an overall estimated benefit of the specific system. The model works with one or more equipped participants and delivers a range for the benefit of advanced safety systems with warning interfaces.
The study aimed at estimating the impact of pedelecs (with an assumed higher speed than bicycles) on the traffic accident severity in Germany for different penetration rates. The analysis shows that in many real situations (68%) an electrical support of bicycles has no influence on the sequence of accident events. Taking into account a number of unreported "single bicycle accidents", the adoption of similar traffic behavior and similar age distribution, the authors determined a shift of 400 former slightly to seriously injured cyclists in Germany per year. Overall this would be an increase of approximately 2.3% in case of 10% of pedelec penetration with the pessimistic assumption of 10 km/h speed increase although first natural driving studies predict a much lower average speed increase of pedelecs. The hypothesis verbalized in the initial question whether a higher distribution of pedelecs will result in more severe accidents in Germany is not verified. The study shows that electrical support didn"t result in higher collision speed in general. In many accident situations, the speed of pedelecs has only a minor influence on the accident severity. Further research focusing on a possible change of driver behavior especially in new target groups (elderly people) will be needed.
The evaluation of the expected benefit of active safety systems or even ideas of future systems is challenging because this has to be done prospectively. Beside acceptance, the predicted real-world benefit of active safety systems is one of the most important and interesting measures. Therefore, appropriate methods should be used that meet the requirements concerning representativeness, robustness and accuracy. The paper presents the development of a methodology for the assessment of current and future vehicle safety systems. The variety of systems requires several tools and methods and thus, a common tool box was created. This toolbox consists of different levels, regarding different aspects like data sources, scenarios, representativeness, measures like pre-crash-simulations, automated crash computation, single-case-analyses or driving simulator studies. Finally, the benefit of the system(s) is calculated, e.g. by using injury risk functions; giving the number of avoided/mitigated accidents, the reduction of injured or killed persons or the decrease of economic costs.
In North America, frontal crash tests in both the regulatory environment and consumer-based safety rating schemes have historically been based on full-width and moderate-overlap (40%) vehicle to barrier impacts. The combination of improved seat-belt technologies, notably belt tensioning and load limiting systems, together with advanced airbags, has proven very effective in providing occupant protection in these crash modes. Recently, however, concern has been raised over the contribution of narrower frontal impacts, involving primarily the vehicle corners, to the incidence of fatality and serious injury as a result of the potential for increased occupant compartment intrusion and performance limitations of current restraint systems. Drawing on data documented in the National Automotive Sampling System (NASS)/ Crashworthiness Data System (CDS) for calendar years 1999 to 2012, the present study examines the characteristics of existing and proposed corner crash test configurations, and the nature of real-world collisions that approximate the test environments. In this analysis, particular emphasis is placed on crash pulse information extracted from vehicle-based event data recorders (EDR's).
Verschiedene Maßnahmen zur Verbesserung der Luftqualität in Städten waren bisher bei der Verminderung von Stickoxiden nur bedingt erfolgreich. Interessant ist, ob der Einsatz der Photokatalyse hier weiterhelfen kann. Photokatalytische Anwendungen wurden schon in einigen Pilotstudien untersucht, zum Beispiel an Straßen beziehungsweise Modell-Canyons sowie in Tunneln. Teilweise wurden international sehr positive Ergebnisse erzielt, geichzeitig liegen aus anderen internationalen Projekten Ergebnisse unterhalb der Messgenauigkeit vor. Die vorgestellten Ergebnisse werden anhand verschiedener Variablen betrachtet und die erwartbare Atmosphärenrelevanz diskutiert. Zusammengefasst wird, dass basierend auf bekannten Feldmessungen für die Photokatalyse eine mittlere NOx-Reduktion von nur wenigen Prozent (in Hauptstraßenschluchten) zu erwarten ist. Dieses Potenzial muss mit anderen Maßnahmen verglichen werden (Kosten/Nutzenanalyse). Materialien müssen vor ihrem Einsatz in der Atmosphäre sorgfältig auf ihre Aktivität untersucht werden. Erfüllen die Oberflächen die Voraussetzungen, um als aktiv eingestuft zu werden, ist ihr Einsatz zur Luftreinhaltung klar zu empfehlen.
Accident simulation and reconstruction for enhancing pedestrian safety: issues and challenges
(2015)
The enhancement of pedestrian safety represents a major challenge in traffic accidents. This study allows a better understanding of the issues in pedestrian protection. It highlights the potential of in-depth studies in identifying relevant crash parameters interfering in the pedestrian safety. A computational simulation tool was developed to reconstruct pedestrian real-world crashes. A sample of 100 in-depth accident cases was reconstructed from two sources: 40 crashes provided by IFSTTAR-LMA and 60 crashes from CASR. To exemplify the methodology, two accident cases from each database were illustrated. A description of the sample of crashes was presented including the travel and impact speed of the vehicle, the driver reaction, the pedestrian walking speed, the scene configuration with the eventual obstacles, etc. This detailed description is pointing to the major factors affecting the limits of pedestrian safety systems.
Es werden erste Ergebnisse des von der Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen (BASt) geförderten Forschungsprojekts "Hauptstudie zur Wirksamkeit von Tunnelwänden als Träger photokatalytischer Oberflächen" (FE 9.0184/2011/ARB) vorgestellt. Ziel war die Erarbeitung von technischen Lösungen zur Stickoxidreduktion an einem Tunnelstandort durch die Konzeptionierung und den Bau abgeschlossener photokatalytischer Reaktoren (Tunnelkassetten) sowie deren Validierung im Tunnel "Rudower Höhe" an der Bundesautobahn A113 in Berlin. Dabei wird künstliches UV-Licht als Energiequelle für den Schadstoffabbau eingesetzt. Es wird speziell über die Modellierungen berichtet, mit Hilfe derer die Tunnelkassetten sowohl strömungstechnisch als auch in Hinblick auf den photokatalytischen Abbauwirkungsgrad optimiert wurden.
Cycling supports the independence and health of the aging population. However, elderly cyclists have an increased injury risk. The majority of injured cyclists is victim of a single-sided accident, an accident in which there is no other party involved. The aim of the project "Safe and Aware on the bicycle" is to develop guidelines for an advisory system that is useful in preventing single-sided accidents. This system is able to support the elderly cyclist; enabling the cyclist to timely adapt his cycling behaviour and improve cycling safety and comfort. For the development of such advisory system the causes of singles accidents and the wishes of the elderly cyclist must be known. First step to obtain this insight was a literature survey and an GIDAS research. Unfortunately accidentology research with GIDAS did not give the full understanding of the pre-crash situations and (especially the behaviour related) factors leading to the accident. The second step was consultation of elderly cyclist through a questionnaire (n=800), in-depth interviews (n=12) and focus group sessions (n=15). This offered complementary information and a much better understanding of the behavioural aspects. Results concern the behaviour in traffic and identify specific physical (i.e. problems looking backwards over the shoulder) and mental issues. Furthermore, the needs and wishes for support in specific cycling situations were identified. In conclusion; The GIDAS results together with the information obtained contacting the elderly cyclists enabled setting up requirements for an advisory system, which is useful in preventing single-sided accidents.
This study aimed at developing an injury estimation algorithm for AACN technologies for Germany and compared them to findings based on Japanese data. The data to build and to verify the algorithm was obtained from the German in-depth Accident Database (GIDAS) and split into a training and a validation dataset. Significant input variables and the generalized linear regression model to predict severe injuries (ISS>15) were selected to maximize area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC). Probit regression with the input parameter multiple impact, delta v, seatbelt use and impact direction gave the largest AUC of 0.91. Sensitivity of the algorithm was validated at 90% and specificity at 76% for an injury risk threshold of 2%. It appears that no major differences between Japan and Germany exist for injury estimation based on delta v and impact direction. However, far side impact and multiple crash events appear to be associated with a larger risk increase in the German data.
The current paper reports on the results of a pilot study aiming to investigate the effect of mobile telephone use on the driving performance of 5 amateur and 5 professional drivers. Their driving acuity was tested through a driving simulator. Analysis and interpretation of the results occurred comparing the drivers' driving performance while talking, reading messages and writing a message on the mobile phone (intervention time) with the drivers' driving performance engaged in no activity (control time). The variables affected by the mobile phone were the "steering", the "lane offset" and the "duration of lane offset". Moreover, the drivers involved in a car crash in the last five years appeared to differ from those who were not involved in a crash in both "lane offset" and "following distance". The results of this pilot study will inform the design of a large experimental study on 50 professional and 50 amateur drivers.
Enhanced protection of pedestrians and cyclists remains on the focus. Besides infrastructural and behavioral aspects it is necessary to exploit technical solutions placed on motorized vehicles. Accident research needs reliable data as well as national road accident statistics. Changing the view on seriously injured road users is one of the challenges which will substantially contribute to the optimization on future traffic safety. The missing accuracy in the definition of personal injury has a detrimental effect on making cost efficient road safety policy which is not only focused on fatal accidents. The European commission requested that, starting in 2015, all EU member states provide more detailed data on the injury status of road casualties, with special regard to the group of seriously injured. Conventional accident data will always be essential. But to obtain detailed data about driver behavior in real traffic situations further data sources are required. These could be EDR data, data from electronic control units, data from traffic surveys and traffic counting, naturalistic diving studies and field operational tests. Gaining insight into normal as well as critical driver behavior will enable accident researchers to deduct functions estimating the increase or decrease of accident risk associated with certain behaviors or vehicle functions. Also with view to the introduction of highly automated driving functions in the future such data is urgently needed. Computer simulation based tools to estimate the benefits of active safety systems are another step on the way towards the safety assessment of automated driving. It is now the duty of the scientific community to ask the right questions, to develop a methodology and to merge all these data sources into a common framework for the assessment of future traffic safety innovations.
SEEKING is looking for answers regarding electric powered bicycles and their relation to traffic safety issues. Does a cyclist need "E"? Is it as risky as riding a moped or are E-bikes creating conflicts with other cyclists? The project described herein, funded by the Austrian Ministry of Transport, has the aim of seeking answers to these hot topics. The SEEKING-team shows an in-depth investigation of vehicle dynamic sensing, together with subjective feedback of test riders to detect similarities and differences between conventional cycling and E-biking. Following an overview on the international status quo, measurement runs and their analyses are performed to find a set of preventative measures to make (E-)biking safer. A specific focus is the detection of curve handling, stopping and acceleration phases as well as conflict studies on course-based test rides and "real world" tests on cycling paths (naturalistic riding).
The Traffic Accident Research Institute at University of Technology Dresden investigates about 1,000 accidents annually in the area around and in Dresden. These datasets have been summarized and evaluated in the GIDAS (German Accident In-Depth Study) project for 13 years. During the project it became apparent that the specific traffic situation of a covert exit of a passenger car and an intersecting two-wheeler involves a high risk potential. This critical situation develops in a large part due to the lack of visibility between the driver and the intersecting bike. In this paper the accident avoidance potential of front camera systems with lateral field of view, which allows the driver to have an indirect sight into the crossing street area will be presented.
Assessment of the effectiveness of Intersection Assistance Systems at urban and rural accident sites
(2015)
An Intersection Collision Avoidance System is a promising safety system for accident avoidance or injury mitigation at junctions. However, there is still a lack of evidence of the effectiveness, due to the missing real accident data concerning Advanced Driver Assistance Systems. The objective of this study is the assessment of the effectiveness of an Intersection Collision Avoidance System based on real accidents. The method used is called virtual pre-crash simulation. Accidents at junctions were reconstructed by using the numerical simulation software PC-Crashâ„¢. This first simulation is called the baseline simulation. In a second step the vehicles of these accidents were equipped with an Intersection Collision Avoidance System and simulated again. The second simulation is called the system simulation. In the system simulation two different sensors and four different intervention strategies were used, based on a time-to-collision approach. The effectiveness of Intersection Collision Avoidance System has been evaluated by using an assessment function. On average 9% of the reviewed junction accidents could have been avoided within the system simulations. The other simulation results clearly showed a change in the principal direction of force, delta-v and reduction of the injury severity.
Analysis of pedestrian leg contacts and distribution of contact points across the vehicle front
(2015)
Determining the risk to pedestrians that are impacted by areas of the front bumper not currently regulated in type-approval testing requires an understanding of the target population and the injury risk posed by the edges of the bumper. National statistics show that approximately 10% of all accident casualties are pedestrians, with 20% to 30% of these pedestrian casualties being killed or seriously injured. However, the contact position across the front of the bumper is not recorded in national statistics and so in-depth accident databases (OTS, UK and GIDAS, Germany) were used to examine injury risk in greater detail. The results showed that some injury types and severities of injuries appear to peak around the bumper edges. Although there are sometimes inconsistencies in the data, generally there is no evidence to suggest that the edges of the bumper are less likely to be contacted or cause injury.
Many safety-relevant tasks in control or diagnostics require binary choices such as "conflict versus separation" in air traffic control, "normal versus pathological" when interpreting x-ray pictures, or "permitted versus forbidden" when inspecting airport security scans. Deciders often are uncertain, but nevertheless required to decide between two alternatives, that is, they have not only to decide upon an action, but also about the admissible level of uncertainty. If the accepted level of judgment certainty is not taken into account, the sequence of decisions does not capture the full picture of the underlying decision process. Differences in judgment certainty are relevant, because they reflect not only the adequacy of the human-machine interface that is evaluated, but also the differences in expertise of the decider and the requirements of the actual situation or task. Therefore, capturing both judgment certainty and discrimination performance is essential. A comparison of different human-machine-interfaces (for air traffic control) is used to illustrate a methodological approach, which allows for integrated analyses of decision processes based on receiver-operator-characteristics and practical guidelines for the evaluation of human-machine-interfaces for safety-relevant operation procedures are provided.
Mit Fokus auf Nordrhein-Westfalen (NRW) wird das urbane NO2-Problem umrissen. Um die Jahresgrenzwerte einzuhalten, sind beispielsweise in allen Straßenschluchten in NRW Reduktionen nötig. Die Europäische Kommission hat gegen mehrere Mitgliedsstaaten, darunter Deutschland, Vertragsverletzungsverfahren wegen der Überschreitung von NO2-Grenzwerten eröffnet. Dargestellt werden die Langzeittrends bezüglich der gemessenen Abnahme bei der Stickoxidbelastung. Potenzielle Maßnahmen können hinsichtlich ihrer möglichen Wirkungen durch den Einsatz von Modellen abgeschätzt werden, zum Beispiel Umweltzonen, Fahrverbote, Elektrofahrzeuge. Die Ergebnisse der Messungen und Modellrechnungen werden dargestellt und kritisch beleuchtet. Als Fazit ergibt sich, dass das urbane NO2-Problem nicht einfach zu lösen ist, Minderungen der NOx-Emissionen spiegeln sich nicht in der gleichen Größenordnung in der Abnahme der NO2-Belastung wieder. Bei zusätzlich wirksamen Maßnahmen wie beispielsweise einem höheren Anteil von Elektrofahrzeugen fehlt die (schnelle) praktische Umsetzbarkeit. Eine Kombination aus lokalen, regionalen und europaweiten Maßnahmen ist nötig, um das Problem zu lösen.
Ausgehend von den rechtlichen Grundlagen für die Luftreinhaltung sowie den Grenzwertfestlegungen für Feinstaub (PM10) sowie Stickoxide (NO2) wird auf die heutige Luftqualität in Städten mit Schwerpunkt Stuttgart eingegangen. Dargelegt werden die festgestellten Überschreitungen bei den Grenzwerten für PM10 und NO2. Eingegangen wird auf die Maßnahmen zur Reduzierung der Luftbelastung in Stuttgart und die Wirkungen in Bezug auf die Senkung der Grenzwert-Übersschreitungen beziehungsweise Jahresmittelwerte von PM10 und NO2 an den Hotspot-Stationen "Am Neckartor" und "Hohenheimer Straße". Abschließend wird ein perspektivischer Ausblick gegeben: obwohl die Luftsituation in den Städten kontinuierlich besser geworden ist, gibt es an stark befahrenen städtischen Straßen weiterhin Grenzwertüberschreitungen. Die EU-Vertragsverletzungsverfahren machen weitere Maßnahmen notwendig. Die Städte brauchen praxiserprobte Maßnahmen und keine langfristigen, kostspieligen Pilotversuche mit unsicherem Ausgang.
Today's volumes of traffic require more and more responsibility from each individual road user in their interactions. Those who drive motor vehicles have the singular obligation to minimise the risk of accidents and hence the severity of injuries, particularly with a view to the most vulnerable road users such as motor bikes, bikes and pedestrians. Since responsible and pro-active driving depends first and foremost on the visual information relayed by our eyes and the visual channel this requires good command of the traffic and all-round visibility from our driver's seat. Granted that human error can never be fully excluded, improving visibility around the car is nevertheless an urgent priority. To do so, we need to rate visibility in the most realistic driving situations. Since the existing visibility metrics and methodology are not applicable to real-life driving situations, this study aimed at developing a new visibility rating methodology based on real-life accident scenarios. On the basis of the cases documented by the accident research project, this study analysed criteria indicative of diminishing visibility on the one hand and revealing some peculiarities in connection with the visibility issue on the other. Based on the above, the project set out to develop a rating methodology allowing to assess all-round visibility in various road situations taking into account both driver and road geometries. In this context, the assessment of visibility while turning a corner, crossing an intersection and joining traffic on a major road (priority through route) is of major importance. The first tests have shown that critical situations can be avoided by adapting the relevant geometries and technical solutions and that significant improvements of road safety can be derived therefrom.
Event data recorders (EDRs) are a valuable tool for in-depth investigation of traffic accidents. EDRs are installed on the airbag control module (ACM) to record vehicle and occupant information before, during, and after a crash event. This study evaluates EDR characteristics and aims at better understanding EDR performance for the improvement of accident reconstruction with more reliable and accurate information regarding accidents. The analysis is based on six crash tests with corresponding EDR datasets.
Um ein zuverlässiges Straßennetz aufrechtzuerhalten, ist es notwendig, neue innovative Ansätze in das Erhaltungsmanagement der Brückenbauwerke im Bundesfernstraßennetz zu integrieren und weiterzuentwickeln. Ergänzend zu den turnusmäßigen Bauwerksprüfungen nach DIN 1076 wird daher ein adaptives Konzept bereitgestellt, das es ermöglichen soll zum einen Zustandsveränderungen frühzeitig zu erfassen und zu bewerten und zum anderen mit Hilfe von erfassten Einwirkungen und Widerständen zukünftige Zustandsentwicklungen zu prognostizieren. Die zu konzipierenden Systeme setzen sich im Wesentlichen aus der Datenerfassung mit Hilfe von Sensorik und den zur echtzeitnahen Verwendung und Bewertung notwendigen Modellen zusammen. Im Rahmen mehrerer Forschungsprojekte wurden einzelne Bausteine eines solchen adaptiven Systems erarbeitet.
T. DÜNCHHEIM erörtert in seinem Einführungsvortrag zu "Die Stellung der Gemeinden im Straßenrecht" die kommunalen Gestaltungsspielräume hinsichtlich ihres Satzungsrechts, das sich auf -§ 19 StrWG NRW stützen lässt. Er schildert die Auswirkungen dieser Gestaltung auf das Straßen- und Straßenverkehrsrecht, die letztlich Ausfluss der gemeindlichen Selbstverwaltungsgarantie sind. Dabei problematisiert er die Abgrenzung zwischen straßenrechtlichem Gemeingebrauch und Sondernutzung sowie die Bedeutung der rechtlichen Ausgestaltung des Straßen- und Straßenverkehrsrechts. Hierbei wird die Anwendung des -§ 45 StVO durch die Gemeinden einer kritischen Analyse unterzogen. A. NETTER schildert in seinem Beitrag "Aktuelle Rechtsfragen der Ortsdurchfahrten" die Gremienstruktur im Straßenwesen und den Einfluss des Europarechts, des Bundes- und Landesstraßenrechts sowie den Ortsdurchfahrtenrichtlinien auf das Straßenwesen. Er stellt dabei die Folgen der Aufhebung der Radwegbenutzungspflicht sowie die aus der Straßenbaulast folgende Entwässerungsverpflichtung der Straßenbaulastträger und ihre Umsetzung in den Gemeinden dar. U. WEGNER berichtet in ihrem Beitrag "Aktuelle Entwicklungen des Verbandsklagerechts" über die Auswirkungen europäischer Richtlinien auf das Umweltrecht. In diesem Zusammenhang wird eine wegweisende Entscheidung des BVerwG erörtert, welche die direkte Anwendung des Art. 9 Abs. 3 AK zum Gegenstand hat. Trotz der Einführung einer bundesrechtlichen Verbandsklage in -§ 64 BNatSchG sei das Problem der Wahrung von Allgemeininteressen nicht gelöst, da diese Norm die Interessen des Umweltschutzes nicht hinreichend zu schützen vermöge. Der Beitrag "Inanspruchnahme öffentlicher Wege durch TK-Unternehmen" von U. STELKENS, stellt eine differenzierte Auseinandersetzung mit dem TKG-Wegerecht dar. Er konstatiert, dass die Bestimmungen des TKG im Wesentlichen auf den Normen des Telegraphenwegegesetz (TWG) basieren. Daher bestehen Spannungsverhältnisse und Reibungsflächen zwischen den verschiedenen Abschnitten des TKG, da das TKG und das TWG unterschiedliche Ziele verfolgen. Beispielsweise seien die -§ 77a bis -§ 77e TKG nicht auf die -§ 68 bis -§ 77 TKG abgestimmt worden. Der abschließende Beitrag "Fachplanerische Auswirkungen des Umweltschadensgesetzes" von M. PETERSEN widmet sich der Frage, ob und welche Auswirkungen das Umweltschadensgesetz auf das Fachplanungsrecht hat. Zunächst wird allgemein herausgearbeitet, dass das Umweltschadensgesetz nicht Schadensersatz- oder Ausgleichsleistungen eines geschädigten Dritten bezweckt; vielmehr sollen Umweltschäden vermieden und die Wiederherstellung geschädigter Umweltgüter erreicht werden. Die Frage, ob und inwieweit das Umweltschadensgesetz Auswirkungen auf das Fachplanungsrecht hat, hängt davon ab, ob die Haftungstatbestände des -§ 3 Abs. 1 USchadG einschlägig sind.
The German highway network is facing new challenges in the near future. The structures have to deal with increasing traffic loads, climate change effects and new requirements regarding sustainability while they are getting older and budget cuts can be expected. To guarantee a reliable highway network, it will be vital to adapt and enhance innovative approaches. Current bridge management relies on the results of conventional bridge inspections and thus has certain limitations when it comes to insufficient load bearing capacity and other systematic weaknesses. Therefore, new approaches for real time condition assessment of critical road infrastructure elements are to be developed.
The utilisation of secondary-safety systems to protect occupants has attained a very high level over the past decades. Further improvements are still possible, but increasingly minor progress is only to be had with a high degree of effort. Thus, a key aspect must be the impact to overall safety in an accident. If reliable information is available on an imminent crash, measures already taken in the pre-crash phase can result in a significantly great influence on the outcomes of the crash. With this background preventive measures are the key to a sustainable further reduction of the figures of crash victims on our roads. This paper aims to show a preventive approach that can contribute to lessening the consequences of a crash by creating an optimum interaction of measures in the fields of primary and secondary safety. To further enhance vehicle safety, driver assistant systems are already available that warn the driver of an imminent front-to-rear-end crash. The next step is to support him in his reactions or if he fails to react sufficiently, to even initiate an automatic braking when the crash becomes unavoidable. Automatic pre-crash braking can, in an ideal situation, fully prevent a crash or can significantly reduce the impact speed and thus the impact energy (and the severity of the accident). If a vehicle is being braked in the pre-crash phase, the occupants are already being pre-stressed by the deceleration. The information available about the imminent crash can be used to activate the belt tensioners and likewise other secondary safety systems in the vehicle right before the impact. The pre-crash deceleration also causes the front of the vehicle to dip. Conventional crash tests do not take this specific impact situation into consideration. This is why, for example, the influences of the pre-crash displacements of the occupants are not recorded in the test results. Furthermore, a reproducible representation of the benefit of the vehicle safety systems which prepare the occupants for the imminent impact is not possible. In order to demonstrate the functions of automated pre-crash braking and to investigate the differences during the impact as a consequence of the altered occupant positions as well as the initiation of force and deformations of the vehicle front, DEKRA teamed up with BMW to carry out a joint crash test with the latest BMW 5 series vehicle. It involved the vehicle braking automatically from a starting test speed of 64 km/h (corresponding to the impact speed set by Euro NCAP) down to 40 km/h. The test was still run by the intelligent drive system of the crash test facility. This required several modifications to be made to the test facility as well as to the vehicle. The paper will describe and discuss some relevant results of the crash test. In addition, the possible benefits of such systems will also be considered. The test supplemented the work of the vFSS working group (vFSS stands advanced Forward-looking Safety Systems).
From literature well-known analyzes on risks, hazards and causes of accidents of older drivers are amended by the present study in which a comparison of the specific features of accident causes of older car drivers (older than 60 years) and of younger car drivers (under 25 years) is conducted. Mainly the question is pursued if specific errors, mistakes and lapses are predominant in the two different age groups. The analysis system ACAS (Accident Causation Analysis System) used hereby consists of a sequential system of accident causation factors from the human, the technical and the infrastructural field, whereupon for this study the influence of the human features on the accident development in two different age groups is of interest. ACAS is both an accident model and an analysis and classification system, which describes the human participation factors of an accident and their causes in the temporal sequence (from the perceptibility to concrete action errors) taking into consideration the logical sequence of individual basic functions. In five steps (categories) of a logical and temporal sequence the hierarchical system makes human functions and processes as determinants of accident causes identifiable. The methodology specifically focuses on the use in so-called "In-Depth" and "On-Scene" investigation studies. With the help of the system for each accident participant one or more of five hypotheses of human cause factors are formed and then specified by appropriate verification criteria. These hypotheses in turn are further specified by indicators in such manner that the coding of the causation factors by a code system meets the needs of database processing and are accessible to a quantitative data analysis. The first results of the descriptive comparison of the two age groups concern mainly differences in the functional levels "information admission/perception" (where the elderly drivers have more difficulties than the young ones) and "information processing/evaluation" (where the younger drivers show more problems). Concerning the cognitive function of "planning" the group of younger drivers seems to be more often involved in an accident because of excessive speed.
Real world accident reconstruction with the Total Human Model for Safety (THUMS) in Pam-Crash
(2013)
Further improvement of vehicle safety needs detailed analysis of real world accidents. According to GIDAS (German In-Depth Accident Study) most car to car front accidents occur at mid-crash severity. In this range thoracic injuries already occur. In this study a real world frontal crash with mid-crash severity out of the AARU database was reconstructed. The selected car to car accident was reconstructed by AARU by means of pc-crash software in order to get the initial dynamic accident conditions. These initial conditions were used to reconstruct the complete accident in more detail using FE models for the car structure and the occupants. Occupant simulations were performed with FE HIII-dummy models and the THUMS using Pam-Crash code. An initial THUMS validation was performed in order to verify the model-´s biofidelity by means of table-top test simulations. THUMS bone stiffness values were modified to match the real word occupant age. A comparison between driver and passenger restraint system loading was done, as well as an injury prediction comparison between the HIII-dummy model and THUMS response for both cases. Detailed comparison between the HIII-dummy models and THUMS regarding thoracic loading are discussed.
Past European collaborative research involving government bodies, vehicle manufacturers and test laboratories has resulted in a prototype barrier face called the Advanced European Mobile Deformable Barrier (AE-MDB) for use in a new side impact test procedure . This procedure offers a better representation of the current accident situation and, in particular, the barrier concept is a better reflection of front-end stiffness seen in today- passenger car fleet compared to that of the current legislative barrier face. Based on the preliminary performance corridors of the prototype AE-MDB, a refined AE-MDB specification has been developed. A programme of barrier to load cell wall testing was undertaken to complete and standardise the AE-MDB specification. Barrier faces were supplied by the four leading manufacturers to demonstrate that the specification could be met by all. This paper includes background, specification and proof of compliance.
The main objective of EC CASPER research project is to reduce fatalities and injuries of children travelling in cars. Accidents involving children were investigated, modelling of human being and tools for dummies were advanced, a survey for the diagnosis of child safety was carried out and demands and applications were analysed. From the many research tasks of the CASPER project, the intention of this paper is to address the following: • In-depth investigation of accidents and accident reconstruction. These will provide important points for the injury risk curve, in order to improve it. Different accident investigation teams collected data from real road accidents, involving child car passengers, in five different European countries. Then, a selection of the most appropriate cases for the injury risk curve and the purposes of the project was made for an in-depth analysis. The final stage of this analysis was to conduct an accident reconstruction to validate the results obtained. The in-depth analysis included on-scene accident investigation, creating virtual simulations of the accident/possible reconstruction, and conducting the reconstruction. In the cases of successful reconstructions, new points were introduced to the injury risk curves. Accident reconstructions of selected cases were carried out in test laboratories as the next step following in-depth road accident investigation. These cases were reconstructed using similar child restraint systems (CRS) and the same type make and model as in the real accidents. Reconstructing real cases has several limitations, such as crash angle, cars" approximation paths and crash speed. However, a few changes and applications on the testing conditions were applied to reduce the limitations and improved the representations of the real accidents. After conducting the reconstructions, a comparison between the deformations of the cars on the real accident and the vehicles from the reconstructions was made. Additionally, a correlation between the data captured from the dummies and the injury data from the real accident was sought. This finalises an in-depth analysis of the accident, which will provide new relevant points to the injury risk curve. The CASPER project conducted a large research programme on child safety. On technical points, a promising research area is the developing injury risk curves as a result of in-depth accident investigations and reconstructions. This abstract was written whilst the project was not yet finished and final results are not yet known, but they will be available by the time of the conference. All the works and findings will not necessarily be integrated in the industrial versions of evaluation tools as the CASPER project is a research program.