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Teil 1, Informations- und Kommunikationstechniken zur Optimierung des Betriebsdienst-Managements: In vielen Arbeits- und Organisationsprozessen des Straßenbetriebsdienstes werden Informations- und Kommunikationstechnologien (IuK-Technologien) eingesetzt, um Arbeitsabläufe einfacher, besser und sicherer zu gestalten sowie umfassende Daten für die Abrechnung und weitere Planung bereit zu stellen. Die Potenziale der IuK-Technologien werden im Straßenbetriebsdienst häufig nur unvollständig genutzt. Ziel des FE-Vorhabens war die systematische Aufbereitung von Anforderungen und Möglichkeiten der IuK-Technologien. Die Anforderungen des Straßenbetriebsdienstes an den Einsatz der IuK-Technologien berücksichtigen neben der derzeitigen Praxis auch künftige Entwicklungen, die sich beispielsweise aus der Einführung der wirtschaftlichkeitsorientierten Steuerung des Betriebsdienstes ergeben. Damit IuK-Technologien erfolgreich betrieben werden können, ist neben Funktionalität und Qualität der technischen Komponenten auch die Berücksichtigung der organisatorischen und betrieblichen Abläufe im Straßenbetriebsdienst von großer Bedeutung. In den Untersuchungen zur mobilen Sprach- und Datenkommunikation wurde deutlich, dass bei Auslaufen des Analogfunks neben dem Aufbau eigenständiger Digitalfunknetze auch die Nutzung des kommerziellen Mobilfunks in Betracht gezogen werden sollte. Wesentliche Grundlagen für die wirtschaftliche Steuerung sind die automatisierte Einsatzdatenerfassung sowie ein umfassendes Bestandsdatenmanagement, wobei Bestandsobjekte auch mit Hilfe von RFID-Chips identifiziert werden können. Im Winterdienst sollten verstärkt berührungslose Sensoren für die Erfassung von Fahrbahntemperatur und "zustand zum Einsatz kommen. Salzmanagementsysteme ermöglichen u.a. die Überwachung von Streustoffvorräten an nicht besetzten Standorten sowie eine übergeordnete Logistik bei Lieferengpässen. Wichtig sind auch Systeme zur Unterstützung der Fahrer von Winterdienstfahrzeugen, durch die Einsätze anforderungsgerechter und flexibler erfolgen können. Es wurden auch innovative IuK-Technologien analysiert, die große Potentiale für den Straßenbetriebsdienst erkennen lassen. Hierzu zählen die mobile Erfassung des Straßenzustandes für den Winterdienst durch Einsatzfahrzeuge oder Fahrzeuge des Individualverkehrs, alternative Kommunikationswege für die Warnung der Verkehrsteilnehmer vor Arbeitsstellen im Verkehrsraum sowie das autonome Fahren von Absperr- und Vorwarnanhängern, durch das die Gefährdung des Personals im Verkehrsraum deutlich reduziert werden kann. Es besteht jedoch noch erheblicher Forschungs- und Entwicklungsbedarf, um diese Technologien effizient im Straßenbetriebsdienst einzusetzen sowie ihren Nutzen umfassend bewerten zu können. Teil 2, Autonomes Fahren für den Straßenbetriebsdienst: Mitarbeiter des Betriebsdienstes sind in Arbeitsstellen auf Autobahnen enormen Unfallgefahren ausgesetzt. Weiterhin erfordert die Sicherung von Arbeitsstellen kürzerer Dauer (AkD) einen hohen personellen und zeitlichen Aufwand. Das FE-Projekt "Informations- und Kommunikationstechniken zur Optimierung des Betriebsdienst-Managements" zeigte, dass die Anwendung autonomer Fahrzeuge im Betriebsdienst die Gefährdung des Personals im Verkehrsraum reduzieren kann. In Ergänzung dazu wurde der Entwicklungsansatz "Autonomes Fahren für den Straßenbetriebsdienst" konkretisiert. Eine untersuchte Minimallösung beinhaltet ein autonom fahrendes Absperrfahrzeug, welches einem Führungsfahrzeug auf der Autobahn folgt. In einem zweiten Gesamtkonzept ist die Automatisierung einer gesamten Absicherungskolonne mit Absperr- und Vorwarnfahrzeugen incl. der unbemannten Anfahrt zur Autobahn auf nicht öffentlichen Straßen vorgesehen. In der technischen Umsetzung handelt es sich bei den Einsatzszenarien der unbemannten Fahrzeuge um Formationsfahrten oder Folgefahrt-Szenarien auf der Autobahn. Unbemannte Fahrzeuge mit den dargestellten Funktionsweisen können deutliche Sicherheitssteigerungen für Betriebsdienstmitarbeiter bieten. Eine erste Abschätzung ergab, dass rund 70 % der Mitarbeiter, welche in AkD auf Autobahnen beim Aufenthalt in Fahrzeugen verunglücken, durch den Einsatz unbemannter Arbeitsstellensicherung geschützt werden können. Dies entspricht rund der Hälfte der insgesamt bei Unfällen in AkD verunglückten Mitarbeiter. Für die Realisierung unbemannter Sicherungsfahrzeuge sind viele technische Fragestellungen zu klären, insbesondere bezüglich der Prognose und Detektion von Fehlfunktionen. Für den Einsatz der vorgeschlagenen Systeme ist eine allgemeine Genehmigung für den täglichen Betrieb notwendig. Hierzu sind zahlreiche rechtliche Fragestellungen zu beantworten. Somit kann die Implementierung unbemannter Sicherungsfahrzeuge im Betriebsdienst als Pilotprojekt für unbemanntes Fahren im Allgemeinen bzw. in anderen Branchen dienen.
Eine konsequente Förderung des Radverkehrs wird im Kontext von Klimaschutz, Lärmminderung und Luftreinhaltung als ein geeigneter verkehrsplanerischer Ansatz gesehen. Quantifizierte Aussagen zu den Einsparpotenzialen, die durch eine wirksame Zunahme des Radverkehrsanteils an den (innerörtlichen) Verkehrsleistungen zur Umweltentlastung erschlossen werden können, lagen bislang nur vereinzelt vor und basieren meist auf pauschalen Ansätzen. Die Quantifizierung von Maßnahmenwirkungen wird in diesem Forschungsprojekt auf der Ebene Gesamtstadt mit einem makroskopischen Verkehrsmodell für die Bestandssituationen ("Analysefall") und definierten Struktur- und Infrastrukturentwicklungsszenarien ("Prognosefälle") für drei Beispielstädte gebildet. Aus den Analysen der verkehrlichen Wirkung wurde deutlich, dass eine Reduzierung der Kfz-Fahrleistung in allen Beispielstädten möglich ist. Die Reduzierung der Fahrleistung ist im Wesentlichen von der Ausgangslage und den angesetzten Maßnahmen abhängig. Die ermittelten Kenngrößen (Modal-Split, Verkehrsleistungen im motorisierten Verkehr) und Kfz-Verkehrsbelastungen stellen die Grundlage zur Ermittlung von Veränderungspotenzialen in Bezug auf Umweltwirkungen dar, die mit makroskopischen Modellen zur straßennetz- bzw. flächenbezogenen Abbildung von Klimagasemissionen (CO2), Verkehrslärm und Luftschadstoffbelastungen (PM10, PM2,5 und NO2) ermittelt werden. Im Vergleich von Analysefall und Prognosefällen wurden so die umweltbezogenen Veränderungspotenziale aus den zugrunde gelegten Szenarien konkret für die drei Beispielstädte quantifiziert
Das Fahrerlaubnisprüfungssystem und seine Entwicklungspotenziale - Innovationsbericht 2009/2010
(2013)
Innovationsberichte dienen dem Ziel, alle zwei Jahre über die mit der mittel- und langfristigen Weiterentwicklung des Fahrerlaubnisprüfungssystems zusammenhängenden Forschungs- und Entwicklungsprozesse zu informieren. Mit Hilfe der Innovationsberichte können somit Qualität, Planmäßigkeit und wissenschaftliche Absicherung der Weiterentwicklung der Fahrerlaubnisprüfung beurteilt werden. Der vorliegende Innovationsbericht beschreibt die Hauptschwerpunkte der Tätigkeit der TÜV | DEKRA arge tp 21 im Hinblick auf die Theoretische Fahrerlaubnisprüfung für den Berichtszeitraum 2009/2010. Diese lagen in (1) Arbeiten zur Modellierung von Fahrkompetenz, (2) der Evaluation und Weiterentwicklung der traditionellen Aufgabenformate und der Prüfungsmethodik, der (3) Durchführung von Forschungsarbeiten zur Verwendung computergenerierter dynamischer Fahrszenarien und der (4) Erschließung innovativer Aufgabentypen zur Prüfung bislang nicht ausreichend geprüfter Fahrkompetenzkomponenten im Bereich des Handlungswissens. Zu (1): Unter Berücksichtigung von inhaltlichen Anforderungsebenen des Fahrverhaltens (z.B. DONGES, 2009) und Aneignungsstufen von Fahrkompetenz (z. B. GRATTENTHALER, KRUEGER & SCHOCH, 2009) wurde ein "Fahrkompetenzstrukturmodell" entworfen, um inhaltliche Komponenten der Fahrkompetenz einzuordnen und die Prüfungsaufgaben strukturieren zu können. Weiterhin lassen sich damit prototypische Anforderungssituationen zur Operationalisierung von Prüfungsinhalten erarbeiten sowie die Inhalts- und Fahrkompetenzbereiche beschreiben, welche durch verschiedene Prüfungsformen abgedeckt werden können. Zu (2): Mit der Einführung der TFEP am PC wurden die technischen Rahmenbedingungen der Prüfungsdurchführung verändert und Verbesserungen zur Gewährleistung der Manipulationssicherheit umgesetzt. Die auf dem Revisionsprojekt aufbauende kontinuierliche Evaluation der Prüfungsaufgaben und Paralleltests zeigte grundsätzlich, dass die große Mehrheit der eingesetzten Prüfungsaufgaben unter Abwägung unterschiedlicher testpsychologischer Kriterien ihre Funktion zur Überprüfung der jeweiligen Kompetenzen erfüllt. Zu (3): Zur Verbesserung der Darbietungsformen bzw. Instruktionsformate wurde von der TÜV | DEKRA arge tp 21 die Softwareloesung "VICOM" entwickelt. Mit dieser Software wurden zum einen die bisher verwendeten Fotos durch computergenerierte statische Abbildungen ersetzt, die mit geringem Aufwand erstellt und variiert werden können. Zum anderen wurde dadurch die Erarbeitung von dynamischen Videosequenzen ermöglicht. Die Erprobung von Aufgaben mit dynamischer Situationsdarstellung deutet darauf hin, dass die intendierte Erfassung der Kompetenzen zur Gefahrenerkennung mit dem neuen Instruktionsformat, das keine Lösungshinweise im Abschlussbild mehr enthält, besser gelingen könnte (FRIEDEL, WEIßE & RÜDEL, 2010). Zu (4): Entwicklungspotenziale für die TFEP werden insbesondere bezüglich der Erfassung von Handlungskompetenzen im Bereich der Verkehrswahrnehmung und Gefahrenvermeidung deutlich. Diese verkehrssicherheitsrelevanten Kompetenzen können in der traditionellen "Wissensprüfung" nicht geprüft werden, da ihre Aneignung Fahrerfahrungen voraussetzt, die zum Prüfungszeitpunkt in der Regel noch nicht gegeben sind. Auch in der traditionellen Fahrprüfung ist eine Erfassung dieser Kompetenzen nur eingeschränkt möglich, weil die Anforderungssituationen im Realverkehr nicht beliebig vom Fahrerlaubnisprüfer gesteuert werden können und Gefahrensituationen aufgrund von Sicherheitserfordernissen auch nicht herbeigeführt werden dürfen. Daher erscheint es notwendig, im Rahmen der deutschen Fahrerlaubnisprüfung eine innovative Prüfungsform zu entwickeln, bei der Verkehrs- und insbesondere Gefahrensituationen realitätsnah am Computer simuliert und zur Operationalisierung der obengenannten Kompetenzkomponenten genutzt werden. Derartige "Verkehrswahrnehmungstests" (bzw. "Hazard Perception Tests") finden sich bereits in einigen Fahranfängervorbereitungssystemen im Ausland. Zur Ausschöpfung der Potenziale der Fahrerlaubnisprüfung in Deutschland muss ihre Weiterentwicklung unter Berücksichtigung des Gesamtsystems der Fahranfängervorbereitung erfolgen. Dabei sind die Qualitätssicherungs- und Entwicklungsmaßnahmen neben Input-Vorgaben wie Lehrpläne und Prüfungsrichtlinien stärker auf Output-Vorgaben wie das von den Fahranfängern zu erreichende Kompetenzniveau zu fokussieren. In festzulegenden Ausbildungsstandards müssen Niveaustufen der Fahrkompetenz, die Fahranfänger bei den Übergängen zwischen den einzelnen Phasen der Fahranfängervorbereitung mindestens erreicht haben sollen, so konkret beschrieben werden, dass sie in Prüfungsaufgaben umgesetzt und im Rahmen der Fahrerlaubnisprüfungen erfasst werden können.
Die Umsetzungspraxis der Verkehrserziehung / Mobilitätsbildung in Kindergärten und Grundschulen wird durch zwei bundesweite Befragungen bei 685 Erzieherinnen bzw. 1.235 Lehrkräften erhoben. Erzieherinnen sind sich ihrer verkehrspädagogischen Verantwortung bewusst und erweisen sich als offen für die entsprechenden Anliegen der Kinder und deren Lebenswelt im räumlichen Umfeld. In Kindergärten dominieren die Sicherheitserziehung sowie die Förderung der Wahrnehmungsfähigkeit und Motorik. Thematisch wird die Kindersicherung im Pkw eher vernachlässigt. Gemeinwesenorientierte Kooperationen sind weit verbreitet. Dabei ist die Zusammenarbeit mit den Verkehrserziehern der Polizei zentral. Die Kooperation mit Grundschulen zeigt deutliche Defizite. Erzieherinnen fühlen sich meist nicht ausreichend auf das Thema "Verkehrserziehung / Mobilitätsbildung" vorbereitet. Die Verkehrserziehung / Mobilitätsbildung an den Grundschulen ist keineswegs randständig. Ihr Stellenwert bei den Lehrkräften ist hoch und die Befassung mit dem Thema wird überwiegend positiv gesehen. Hinsichtlich der verwendeten Methoden und aufgegriffenen Themen liegt der Schwerpunkt in der Sicherheitserziehung sowie in Bewegungsspielen. Die Potenziale der Ganztagsschule werden noch wenig für verkehrspädagogische Inhalte genutzt. Es zeigen sich Informationsdefizite bei den nicht als Obleute etc. tätigen Lehrkräften. Bei Kontaktierung, Materialienbezug und Kooperation stechen die Polizei, die Verkehrswacht und der lokale Verkehrsbetrieb hervor. Die schulinternen wie -externen Unterstützungs- und Beratungsangebote werden gut angenommen. Nur eine Minderheit der Befragten hat eine verkehrspädagogische Lehrveranstaltung besucht, eine entsprechende Zusatzqualifikation erworben oder an einer Fortbildung teilgenommen. Die Lehrkräfte zeigen Interesse an einschlägigen Fortbildungen. Der Bericht enumeriert Handlungsempfehlungen für die Entwicklung der Verkehrserziehung / Mobilitätsbildung im Elementar- und Primarbereich.
Die vorliegende Literaturdurchsicht gibt einen Überblick über (inter-)nationale Befunde zum Zusammenhang zwischen dem Verkehrsunfallrisiko und dem ökonomischen, sozialen und kulturellen Hintergrund der Verkehrsteilnehmer. Dabei werden schwer erreichbare oder sozial schwache Personen als Zielgruppen fokussiert. Personen können entweder organisatorisch schwer erreichbar sein (Identifikation; Ansprechbarkeit), oder die Verkehrssicherheitsangebote erreichen ihr Zielpublikum nicht (Akzeptanz; kognitive Ebene) bzw. werden nicht verhaltensrelevant (Compliance; Verhaltensebene). Sozial Schwache werden auf ökonomischen, sozialen und kulturellen Dimensionen von besser Gestellten unterschieden. Parallelen in der Zielgruppenansprache und Ansatzpunkte für Kooperationsmöglichkeiten werden explizit bei Akteuren der Gesundheitsförderung gesehen. Deren Strategie der Verknüpfung verhaltenspräventiver mit verhältnispräventiven Maßnahmen in einem Setting-Ansatz wird vorgestellt. Das Setting Stadtteil/ Quartier erscheint für Interventionen besonders Erfolg versprechend. Zur Verkehrssicherheitsarbeit anschlussfähige Programme der Gesundheitsförderung werden vorgestellt. Der Bericht zeigt die Anknüpfungspunkte der Verkehrssicherheitsarbeit für eine Kooperation im Programm "Soziale Stadt" auf. Ein solches Vorgehen eröffnet für die Verkehrssicherheitsarbeit neue Potenziale zur Ansprache schwer erreichbarer oder sozial schwacher Zielgruppen. Als konkrete Beispiele für eine verhaltens- und verhältnispräventive Verkehrssicherheitsarbeit im Setting Schule wird auf Ansätze der personalen Kommunikation im Setting beruflicher Schulen sowie ein sich gegenüber dem lokalen Umfeld öffnendes Mobilitätsmanagement von Schulen verwiesen. Ein Pilotprojekt zur Kooperation mit anderen Partnern in einem Setting-Ansatz wird ebenso empfohlen wie die Dokumentation vorhandener Maßnahmeansätze für schwer erreichbare Zielgruppen in einer Online-Datenbank oder die Nutzung des Internets zur Zielgruppenansprache.
Die Ermittlung von Grundunfallkostenraten und Quantifizierung von Zuschlägen für Landstraßenquerschnitte sind Ziel dieses Forschungsvorhabens. Die Ergebnisse sollen eine Bewertungsgrundlage im Handbuch für die Verkehrssicherheit von Straßen (HVS) darstellen. 3.600 km Landstraße aus sechs Bundesländern liegen dem Untersuchungskollektiv zu Grunde. Neben dem mehrjährigen Unfallgeschehen bilden Daten der SIB und Erhebungen aus Streckenbefahrungen die Datengrundlage der Untersuchungen. Die Zuordnung der Streckenabschnitte erfolgte in Anlehnung an den Entwurf der Richtlinie für die Anlage von Landstraßen (RAL) in fünf verschiedene (Regel-) Querschnittsgruppen. Multivariate Modelle zur Beschreibung der Unfallhäufigkeit bilden die mathematische Grundlage der Analyse. Gegenüber monokausalen Betrachtungen weisen sie den Vorteil auf, eine Vielzahl von Einflussgrößen zu erfassen sowie mögliche Abhängigkeiten zwischen verschiedenen Variablen zu berücksichtigen. Für die verschiedenen Straßenquerschnitte und Einmündungen mit Vorfahrtregelung durch Verkehrszeichen wurden jeweils drei Modelle nach Unfallschwere erstellt. Zu Grunde liegende Merkmale wurden auf ihren signifikanten Erklärungsanteil zur Beschreibung der Unfallhäufigkeit geprüft und entsprechend im Modell als Zuschlag berücksichtigt. Auf Basis dieser Ergebnisse wurden Funktionen zum Verlauf der Unfallrate und Unfallkostenrate erzeugt. Grundunfallkostenraten beschreiben das fahrleistungsbezogene Unfallkostenniveau eines Netzelements, welches bei regelkonformem Ausbau der Strecke erreicht werden kann. Da in den Modellen auch Merkmale berücksichtigt sind, die kein Defizit im eigentlichen Sinne darstellen, entspricht die Höhe der UKR ohne jegliche Zuschläge einem Grundniveau. Diesem sind Zuschläge, unterteilt in Defizite und die Streckencharakteristik beschreibende Eigenschaften, zuzuordnen. Anhand der Modelle kann nachgewiesen werden, dass verschiedene Straßenquerschnitte ein unterschiedliches Grundsicherheitsniveau aufweisen. Zwischen Unfallhäufigkeit und DTV besteht ein nichtlinearer Zusammenhang. Die Unfallrate bzw. Unfallkostenrate stellt somit eine vom DTV abhängige Kenngröße dar. In Abhängigkeit des Querschnitts besitzen verschiedene Merkmale einen Einfluss auf die Verkehrssicherheit. Die Größenordnung der Zuschläge kann als Anteil am Grundniveau der UKR beschrieben werden. Die ermittelten Zuschläge wurden ggf. vergleichend betrachtet und im Rahmen einer plausibilisierten Bewertung der Querschnitte angepasst. In Anlehnung an das HVS erfolgt die Darstellung der Berechnung für Grundunfallkostenraten und deren Zuschläge für Landstraßenquerschnitte. Dabei werden zwei verschiedene Ansätze vorgestellt. Die Ergebnisse für Einmündungen mit Vorfahrtregelung durch Verkehrszeichen besitzen empfehlenden Charakter.
A series of drop tests and vehicle tests with the adult head impactor according to Regulation (EC) 631/2009 and drop tests with the phantom head impactor according to UN Regulation No. 43 have been carried out by the German Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt) on behalf of the German Federal Ministry of Transport, Building and Urban Development (BMVBS). Aim of the test series was to study the injury risk for vulnerable road users, especially pedestrians, in case of being impacted by a motor vehicle in a way described within the European Regulations (EC) 78/2009 and (EC) 631/2009. Furthermore, the applicability of the phantom head drop test described in UN Regulation No. 43 for plastic glazing should be investigated. In total, 30 drop tests, thereof 18 with the adult head impactor and 12 with the phantom head impactor, and 49 vehicle tests with the adult head impactor were carried out on panes of laminated safety glass (VSG), polycarbonate (PC) and laminated polycarbonate (L-PC). The influence of parameters such as the particular material properties, test point locations, fixations, ambient conditions (temperature and impact angle) was investigated in detail. In general, higher values of the Head Injury Criterion (HIC) were observed in tests on polycarbonate glazing. As the HIC is the current criterion for the assessment of head injury risk, polycarbonate glazing has to be seen as more injurious in terms of vulnerable road user protection. In addition, the significantly higher rebound of the head observed in tests with polycarbonate glazing is suspected to lead to higher neck loads and may also cause higher injury risks in secondary impacts of vulnerable road users. However, as in all tests with PC glazing no damage of the panes was observed, the risk of skin cut injuries may be expected to be reduced significantly. The performed test series give no indication for the test procedure prescribed in UN Regulation No. 43 as a methodology to approve glass windscreen not being feasible for polycarbonate glazing, as all PC panes tested fulfilled the UN R 43 requirements. The performance of the windscreen area will not be relevant for vehicle type approval according to the upcoming UN Regulation for pedestrian protection. However, it is recommended that pedestrian protection being considered for plastic windscreens to ensure at least the same level of protection as glass windscreens.
Beispielhaft am Begleiteten Fahren wurde eine Methode zur standardisierten Erfassung der Fahrsicherheit im Realverkehr entwickelt. Hierfür wurde eine Fahrstrecke mit einer Fahrdauer von etwa 90 Minuten festgelegt, die eine repräsentative Auswahl von Verkehrsszenarien enthielt, mit denen Fahrer üblicherweise beim Fahren konfrontiert werden. Diese Strecke umfasste Innerortsbereiche sowie Landstraßen- und Autobahnabschnitte. Auf dieser Strecke wurden Referenzdaten von 40 Fahrern erhoben. 26 dieser Fahrer waren zwischen 18 und 22 Jahren alt, davon hatten 17 am Begleiteten Fahren teilgenommen. Das Alter der übrigen 14 Fahrer, die allesamt nicht am Begleiteten Fahren teilgenommen hatten, lag zwischen 23 und 50 Jahren. Während der Fahrten wurden elf Variablen elektronisch im Fahrzeug erfasst (u. a. Fahrgeschwindigkeit, Abstand zum vorausfahrenden Fahrzeug). Diese elektronisch erfassten Daten wurden nach dem System I-TSA (INVENT " Traffic Safety Assessment; Glaser, Waschulewski & Schmid, 2005) ausgewertet und um Papier-und-Bleistift-Tests sowie um Beurteilungen durch den Untersuchungsleiter ergänzt. Insgesamt ergaben sich 18 Skalen. Diese zeigten hohe Reliabilitäten. Die Skalen ermöglichen eine profilartige Darstellung der Fahrsicherheit einzelner Fahrer und von Fahrergruppen, jeweils relativ zu einer Referenzgruppe. In einer Ex-Post-facto-Analyse der gegebenen Stichprobe konnte anhand dieser Skalen zwischen Fahrern, die am Begleiteten Fahren teilgenommen hatten und denen, die dies nicht getan hatten, unterschieden werden. Damit steht ein umfassendes, auf einer psychometrischen Methodik basierendes Testsystem zur Verfügung, das auf einer standardisierten Fahrprobe im Straßenverkehr basiert. Dieses System kann, ohne aufwändige und substanzielle Änderungen, auch für andere verkehrsmedizinische und verkehrspsychologische Fragestellungen eingesetzt werden.
Introduction: The incidence of trauma-related cervical-spine fractures is 19-88 / 100.000. In contrast, the incidence of cervical spine injuries is as high as 19% - 51% of all spinal trauma. Cervical spine injuries in non-polytrauma patients are rare. However, due to the potential damage to the spinal cord these traumata are feared and mustn't be missed. Cervical spine injuries represent the highest reported early mortality rate of all spinal trauma. The rate of functional impairment afterwards is high and the rate of reintegration into work is low compared to other organ systems. In the past, trauma surgeons often did x-rays of the cervical spine with low inhibition threshold and often without strong clinical suggestion for vertebral or discoligamental injuries. This practice was queried by the Canadian C-Spine rule and extensively discussed in the past. Therefore we did a retrospective study whether non-polytrauma patients benefit from cervical spine x-rays.
This paper will outline ETSC's contribution to the European Union's road safety policy 2011-2020. It will present some of the main recommendations from ETSC's Blueprint for the 4th Road Safety Action Programme and will introduce the response to the European Commission's Road Safety Policy Orientations 2011-2020 (published July 2010). The second framework document presented is the Transport White Paper (published March 2011). The paper will focus on new targets and the new vision set for Europe's Road Safety policy picking out some issues in particular such as traffic law enforcement and the protection of vulnerable road users. It will argue that by reinforcing the current Road Safety Policy Orientations, the EU will be better placed to reach its new ambitious goal of halving road deaths by 2020 and the longer term zero casualty vision.
Analysis of the accident scenario of powered two-wheelers on the basis of real-world accidents
(2013)
For the first time since 20 years the German national statistics of traffic accidents revealed an increasing number of fatalities and seriously injured persons in 2011. This negative development was especially caused by increasing numbers in all groups of vulnerable road users (VRU). Furthermore, the comparison of fatality reduction rates between several categories of road users shows that persons on motorcycles show the worst performance over years. Although every second fatality in German traffic accidents is still a car occupant, users of PTW make up more than 20% in the meantime. Assuming further improvements in the field of occupant protection this trend will continue. For that reason, a study on the basis of real-world accidents was conducted to describe the accident scenario involving motorcycles and to identify the reasons of the above-described fact. Approximately 1.800 motorcycle accidents out of GIDAS database were used for the analyses. The first part of the study deals with the question how representative the GIDAS database is for the German motorcycle accident scenario. Afterwards, detailed descriptive statistics on motorcycle accidents were presented considering numerous parameters about the accident scene, environmental influences, vehicle information, individual characteristics, interview data, injury severity and injury causation. One important point is the identification of the most frequent critical situations that are typical for motorcycle accidents. Furthermore, a special focus was on accident causation. Finally, conspicuous facts out of the analysis are emphasized. All in all, the study gives a comprehensive overview about the German motorcycle accident scenario. One the one hand, the use of weighted GIDAS data allows representative and robust statements on the basis of large case numbers; on the other hand highly detailed conclusions can be drawn. The results of the study help to understand the particularities of motorcycle accidents and provide approaches for further improvements in the field of PTW safety.
It is very important for Automotive OEMs to get feedback on their product performance on real roads for continuous improvement. Every OEM has a way of collecting this feedback for various performance parameters. Systematic accident research is a way to generate the information related to safety performance of the vehicle. In India, while there is a large amount of data related to the accidents, it is found this data is aimed at understanding the gross statistics and not directly useful for technology development. This paper explains learnings from a pilot study carried out in collaboration with an Emergency Medical Services provider on one of the expressways (motorways). This pilot study has resulted in development of working model that could now be scaled up at for wider application. The paper also presents some of the important observations based on the data collected.
Police records about traffic accidents like used by IRTAD (International Road Traffic and Accident Database) and CARE (Community Road Accident Database) do not represent all road injuries. For instance, road accidents of bicyclists without a counterpart are usually not reported. Furthermore, IRTAD-like data contains hardly any information on injury outcome and accident circumstances. This information gap leads to an under-representation of the safety concerns of the most vulnerable road users like children and the elderly both in accident research and safety promotion. Injury registration for the European Injury Database (IDB), in turn, combines details of accident causation with diagnostic information that can be used to assess injury severity and long term consequences. The IDB is collecting data from hospital emergency department patients and is being implemented in a growing number of countries. In this article IDB results on mode of transport and injury outcome are presented from a sample of nine EU member states.
While accident statistics on a national level are provided by many countries, there is a need for international data that includes more detailed information about the accident, so called in-depth data. As a consequence, accident data projects have been emerging in different regions of the world. This creates a need for comparable and mergeable data from different countries, enabling the use of already existing accident data resources and helping to expedite the improvement of global road safety. While existing approaches focus that mostly on building a comprehensive accident database from scratch, the iGLAD project (Initiative for the Global Harmonization of Accident Data) attempts a more pragmatic approach by building on top of the work already accomplished in this area and complementing it. The target of iGLAD is to help setting up an additional dataset as a compatibility layer between already existing world wide data sets and integrating the structure of these by defining a common data scheme. This dataset is limited to the common denominator between the existing data sets and is inherently rather small and simple. Eventually, an individual converter for each participating accident investigation group will be built that enables pooling all data sets in a common repository. This not only saves costs and time, and hence makes such a target more feasible, but also creates data that is usable right from the start. This paper gives an overview of the current status of iGLAD and first steps taken. Additionally, some methodological aspects are discussed, next to a glance at other projects working currently on related issues, providing additional input for iGLAD. Finally, an overview of next steps and intended future work is given.
The increasing economics in India has an enormous growth of its road traffic. As observed from official Indian accident statistics the number of road fatalities are one of the highest worldwide. In contrast to most industrialized nations they have an rapidly increasing trend. To come along with this trend it becomes more than essential to understand the traffic accident situation. The official Indian accident statistics gives a glimpse of only basic information. Therefore more detailed data is needed. By using In-depth accident data and officially representative statistics the current accident situation can be evaluated in India, if a suitable weighting methodology is considered. Hence in 2009/2010 a pilot study with the collaboration partner JP-Research India pvt. Ldt. was gathered in Tamil Nadu in south of India. In-depth accident investigations were done around the Coimbatore area on four highways. At first, the collected data is evaluated. Due to consequent and continuous further development based on the first approach a methodology similar to NASS/CDS/GES in the US and GIDAS in Germany was developed. Of course all relevant accident related parameters including pictures and severity information were collected. As a matter of fact based on scaled sketches and reconstruction benefit analyses can be done in order to analyze the accident scenery in India. As a first outcome influence from infrastructure, missing education and vehicle safety were identified as key parameters in order to reduce the number of accidents and casualties. To compare the accident situation against international standards an accident classification for left hand traffic was developed based on the German Insurance classification system. Looking into detail additional accident types were identified and added to create an Indian accident type catalogue. The positive results encouraged several OEMs to participate in this investigation and together with BOSCH a consortium was established in 2010/11. Within one year from beginning in May 2011 about 200 highway accidents were collected, reported and reconstructed using the new standard. Hence a first good overview of the accident situation is available for the Coimbatore Tamil Nadu area. The major target for establishing accident investigations is the extension towards other states of India and urban areas to achieve a better overview of the accident scenery. Therefore local and national authorities have to be embedded in order to strengthen the awareness against traffic safety.
Do learner gain sufficient braking capabilities at the end of education for collision avoidance?
(2013)
The paper describes a test design to evaluate the braking behaviour in the course of the driver education. The results show that the braking capabilities increased during the driver education and the learning effects are the same for males and females. The evaluation limit is set to 6 m/s-². At the beginning of education, 50% of the drivers do not reach this limit, although the driver education car is equipped with an emergency brake assist, which is regularly installed in all vehicles since 2009. After the education, 100% of the drivers can reach the limit. The results are mapped to a collision avoidance scenario.
Since 2008, the authors inspected fatal traffic accidents on the spot every year, with the cooperation of Toyota police station in Aichi pref. In the jurisdiction, numbers of fatal accidents were 18 in 2008, 12 in 2009, 14 accidents in 2010, and 16 in 2011. We here report the results of our analysis of information obtained by detailed inspection for those that occurred from 2008 to 2010. We focused on vehicle-to-pedestrian accidents, which accounted for about 45% of all accidents in 2008. Because many accidents occurred on residential roads not far from pedestrians" homes, it was revealed that the decrease of the collision speed by traffic calming such as humps and zone speed management, was highly effective. On the other hand, pedestrian detection technologies seemed to be also effective as a countermeasure on vehicle side. Every pedestrian position against a vehicle was clarified and TTC (Time to Collision) was calculated provisionally. Pedestrian accidents in intersections were also examined. Among the intersection pedestrian accidents within the jurisdiction, compared with the national average in Japan, the ratio of intersections without a signal and the ratio without a pedestrian crossing were high. According to the comparison of the Japanese traffic accident patterns between 2001 and 2008, pedestrian accidents during turning right and turning left did not decrease much. For elderly drivers, these accidents occurred very often. Finally, single vehicle accidents were analysed with the accident pattern analysis methods used above. There were high numbers of single vehicle accidents against object on single roads. Although fatal accidents against guardrails decreased, the numbers of fatal accidents against a utility pole and a sign pole were nearly constant. As for the impact with narrow width objects such as utility poles, the fatality rate was very high, and countermeasures of both road infrastructure and vehicles seem to be effective.
A concept for Safe-Driving-Trainings with a focus on risky behavior and safety related attitudes has been evaluated. 519 participants have been tested before and after the training by means of a questionnaire with the topics: technical driving competence, awareness of risks, and propensity for anticipation. A control group (131 subjects) was used to check for the possibility of response artifacts. Three months later, 92 members of the treatment group and 25 members of the control group have been tested again. The results show significant positive changes in driving competence, risk awareness, and safety related attitudes, especially anticipation, due to the training. Compared to the control group the participants have become more risk aware and they regard of risk avoiding behavior as more important. The results show that this concept for Safe-Driving-Trainings has not only short-term but, more importantly, long-term positive effects on the safety-relevant attitudes and cognitions of young drivers.
The paper aims to study the injury risk and kinematics of pedestrians involved in different passenger vehicle collisions. Furthermore, the difference of pedestrian kinematics in the accidents involved minivan and sedan was analyzed. The 18 sample cases of passenger car to pedestrian collisions were selected from the database of In-depth Investigation of Vehicle Accident in Changsha of China (IVAC),of which the 12 pedestrian accidents involved in a minivan impact for each case, and the 6 accidents in a sedan impact for each. The selected cases were reconstructed by using mathematical models of pedestrians and accident vehicles in a multi-body dynamic code MADYMO environment. The logistic regression models of the risks for pedestrian AIS 3+ injuries and fatalities were developed in terms of vehicle impact speed by analyzing the minivan-pedestrian and sedan-pedestrian accidents. The difference of pedestrian kinematics was identified by comparing the results from reconstructed pedestrian accidents between the minivans and sedans collisions. The result shows that there is a significant correlation among the impact speed and the severity of pedestrian injuries. The minivan poses greater risk to pedestrian than sedan at the same impact speed. The kinematics of pedestrian was greatly influenced by vehicle front shape.
This study analyses no.39 cases in which n.41 motorcyclists were fatally injured, or 36% of total motorcycle fatalities in Northern Ireland between 2004 and 2010 (n.114). There were n.17 cases (43.6%) where the actions of another vehicle driver caused the collision, in thirteen of these cases the motorcycles had their lights switched on. The remaining n.22 collisions (56.4%) were due to the actions of the motorcyclist. In the approach to the collision scene, there were n.13 cases (31.7%) in which the approach was a right hand bend and in n.8 (19.5%) cases, the approach was a left hand bend. In the remaining n.18 (43.9%) cases, the approach was a straight road. Of the n.17 (41.4%) motorcycles that slid after falling, n.10 (24.4%) fell onto their right side and the remaining n.7 (17.1%) fell onto their left side. The information from this study identifies primary and contributory causes of motorcycle collisions.
The misuse of CRS (child restraint system) is one of the most urgent problems in connection of child safety in cars. Numerous field studies show that more than two thirds of all CRS are used in a wrong way. This misuse could lead to serious injuries for the children. Surprisingly the quality of CRS use is coded much better in accident data (e.g. GIDAS) than the results of observatory field studies show. It is expected that misuse of CRS was not detected by the accident teams in a large number of the cases. An essential part in improving child seats and their usability is the knowledge of the relation between misuse and resulting injuries. For that the analysis and experimental reconstruction of accidents is an important part. For allowing an exact experimental accident reconstruction, it is necessary to have detailed information about the securing situation of the child and about the installation of the CRS in the car.
Automotive interiors have long been a potentially injurious impact area to occupants during accidents, especially in the absence of adequate padding. The U.S. Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) 201, Occupant Protection in Interior Impact, outlines test procedures and performance criteria in order to mitigate potentially injurious head impacts to interior surfaces. FMVSS 201 specifies a finite set of impact locations and applies to passenger vehicles of a specified year range and with a gross vehicle weight rating less than 10,000 lb. In this paper, two head impact test methodologies are presented, a pendulum-test device and a Free Motion Headform (FMH) launching device, which allows for dynamic, repeatable impact evaluation of various vehicle interior surfaces and their impact attenuation abilities. The presented testing includes multiple series that evaluate the effect of differing vehicle upper interior padding on occupant head injury. One study in particular, analyzes a head impact to the side header of a heavy truck (not included in FMVSS 201) during a 90 degree rollover. Additionally, two other series of tests are presented which assess the injury reduction effect of side airbags to near side as well as far side occupants in a side impact scenario. Lastly, a forensic analysis is presented which evaluates two possible head impact locations experienced in a real world accident by analysis of the resulting interior compartment damage utilizing the FMH launching device test method. The data collected and presented includes accelerometer instrumentation and high speed video analysis. These studies demonstrate that adequate padding and airbags are very effective at mitigating head injury potential at impact speeds of 12-25 mph (19-40 kph).
The number of road accidents in Portugal has decreased significantly in the last decades, however, this tendency is not similar in all types of transportation. In the most recent years and by European standards, Portugal is still one of the leading countries concerning the number of fatalities in Powered Two Wheelers (PTW) accidents. To this effect, the in-depth investigation of PTW accidents is crucial and so, a thorough statistical analysis concerning the main factors influencing PTW riders injury severity accidents was undertaken regarding the 2007-2010 period in the National Road Safety Authority (ANSR) injured riders database using the software SPSS. In addition, to determine the importance of absent factors in the database analysis, such as velocity, a set of 53 real accidents involving PTW were also investigated and computationally reconstructed using the software PC-Crash. Lateral collisions between a motorcycle, its rider and the side of three different passenger cars were also simulated, varying the motorcycle impact angle and velocity in order to estimate the PTW deformation energy and the rider- injuries, as this accident configuration stands out in terms of frequency and even severity. The results of this detailed study are presented.
Supervision of the safety performance in public transport is one of the main tasks of the Federal Office of Transport (FOT) in Switzerland. Recently a three level system of safety indicators has been defined to cover all means of Swiss public transport. The safety indicators are fed by the FOT incident database since the year 2000. In cooperation with the Institute for Traffic Safety and Automation Engineering (iVA) at TU Braunschweig, Germany, FOT is developing a suitable methodology for the definition and evaluation of the safety targets in Swiss public transport. The methodology is applied for evaluation of safety indicators on a country level and for single transport companies. In a new approach the abovementioned methodology is applied to car incident data to develop an indicator based cross-modal safety measure.
The effect of fatigue on driving has been compared to the effect of alcohol impairment in both driver performance and crash studies. However are crash characteristics and causation mechanisms similar in crashes involving fatigue to those involving alcohol when studied in the real world? This has been explored by examining data held in the EC project SafetyNet Accident Causation Database. Causation data was recorded using the SafetyNet Accident Causation System (SNACS). The focus was on Cars/MPV crashes and drivers assigned the SNACS code Alcohol or Fatigue. The Alcohol group included 44 drivers and the Fatigue group included 47. "Incorrect direction" was a frequently occurring critical event in both the Alcohol and Fatigue groups. The Alcohol group had more contributory factors related to decision making and the Fatigue group had more contributory factors relating to incorrect observations. This analysis does not allow for generalised statements about the significance of the similarities and differences between crashes involving alcohol and fatigue, however the observed differences do suggest that attempts to quantify the effect of fatigue by using levels of alcohol impairment as a benchmark should be done with care.
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.
With an ever rising human life expectancy the share of elderly people in society is constantly rising. This leads to the fact that at the same rate the share of people with age related diseases such as dementia and poor eyesight taking part in traffic will rise and therefore traffic accidents caused by this group of people due to the disease will play an ever greater role. This Situation will be among the future challenges of road safety work. At present this study displays specific characteristics of accidents caused by elderly car drivers (aged 65 or higher) based on the analysis of the German In-Depth Accident Study GIDAS. Herein almost 1000 elderly car drivers were identified as accident participants in the years 2008 to 2011. The focus of this study lies on identifying special types of accidents which are caused by elderly drivers and on characterizing these types with the information gathered on scene and by interviewing the participants. The main evidence analyzed is the knowledge about the accident locality, the trajectories of the participants as well as the reasons for the occurrence of the accidents. Furthermore personal information such as the personal condition before the accident and driving purposes is used to identify patterns of contributing circumstances for accidents caused by elderly traffic participants.
Beside numerous information about vehicles injuries and environmental data the GIDAS database contains detailed reconstruction data. This data is calculated by a reconstruction engineer who handles about 1000 accidents per year. The spectrum of one reconstruction ranges from simple crossing accidents to complex run-off accidents with rollover events. Especially for complex accident scenarios there is a large effort to design the environment of the accident scene within PC-Crash ®. To reduce the reconstruction time by maintaining the high quality of reconstruction 3D-geodata can be useful. Geodata is available for nearly every area in Germany and can be used for a fast and detailed creation of complex accident environments. In combination with the accident sketch areal images of the accident scene can be created and the participants are implemented in the new-built 3D-reconstruction environment. As a consequence, the characteristics of the terrain can be considered within the reconstruction which is especially important for run-off accidents.
Rollovers continue to be a major source of heavy truck fatalities when compared to other accident modes. Real world rollover accidents are analyzed and two distinct damage patterns are identified. Damage to heavy truck roofs can occur from lateral loading that transitions to vertical roof loading as the vehicle rolls onto its side and then over onto its roof. A second load path can occur when the vehicle has rolled onto its side and furrows into the ground generating large longitudinal friction forces between the roof and ground. A review of the previous literature and various test methodologies are presented. A sled impact test methodology is presented which allows for structural assessment of a heavy truck cab's crashworthiness in both of these loading environments. Two test series are presented using the sled impact test methodology in order to analyze real world truck rollovers using varying impact platen and contact angles. The structural deformation and failure patterns were found to be consistent with damage seen in real world accident vehicles. In each case, a second equivalent truck cab was then reinforced and tested under similar conditions to evaluate the energy management and crush resistance of a stronger cab structure. These structural reinforcements demonstrated a substantial reduction in roof crush and protected the survival space of the occupant compartment. The sled impact test procedure is an effective method for testing the structural performance of a heavy truck cab in a variety of loading scenarios comparable to real world accidents and ascertaining the load and energy load levels in these accident modes.
The GIDAS-investigation team of Dresden (VUFO) has documented more than 11.500 accidents since 1999. The documentation of the accident includes beside vehicle-, injury- and environmental-data very detailed reconstruction data. Within this accident investigation the VUFO began to record the skid resistance of the accident site in 2009. The measurements are divided in macro- and microroughness (Sand depth method and Portable Skid Resistance Tester-SRT-by Munro-Stanley London-©). Both methods are used to determine the skid resistance for more than 1000 passenger cars. The aim of the present study is to find out a relationship between the measured skid resistance, the road conditions and the friction coefficient, which is used to calculate the maximum accelerations and decelerations during a reconstruction of an accident. Basic approach to convert the SRT-value into the friction coefficient is the calculation of the theoretical absorbed energy of the spring rubber system of the swinging arm of lever. This absorbed energy is used to get the friction coefficient by using the equations for the work of friction. To consider the road-behavior, in correlation to the friction coefficient, the results will be merged with existing literature. Last step for this study will be a comparison between actual used friction coefficients all over the GIDAS-database and the theoretical results. The study shows, if it is possible to use the SRT-Measurement for the estimation of a friction coefficient for the reconstruction of a traffic accident. As expected, the GIDAS-Database and the additional measurement of the roughness of the road directly on the spot are an enormous useful dataset.
The grip between the road surface and vehicle tires is the physical basis for the moving of all vehicles in road traffic. In case of an accident the available grip level is one of the most relevant influence factors, influencing the causation and the procedure of the accident. However, the estimation of the grip level is not easy and therefore, is commonly not done on the accident scene. This is especially true for the measurement of the water depth. Until now, real accident databases provide no measurement data about the grip level and the water film depth and thus, the estimation of its influence is not possible yet. From the tyre manufacturers point of view, it is important to know about the road conditions (namely grip level, macro-texture, water depth, temperature) at the accident scene, as well as the operating conditions of the vehicles (braking, loss of control, speed, etc). These data is necessary to define relevant tyre traction tests for the end-user and for regulations. For this reason VUFO and Michelin developed a consistent method for the measurements of grip level and water depth for the accidents of the GIDAS database. The accident research team of Dresden, which documents about 1000 accidents with at least one injured person every year, is measuring the micro-roughness and the macro-roughness directly on the spot. For the measurement of the micro-roughness a Skid Resistance Tester (British Pendulum) is used. The Mean Texture Depth (describing the macro-roughness) is measured by the Sand Depth Method. Since June 2009, measurements for more than 700 accidents including 1200 participants have been carried out. In case of wet or damp road conditions during the accident, the water depth is measured additionally. Therefore VUFO and Michelin developed a special measurement device, which allows measurements with an accuracy of 1/10 millimetre. The measurement point at the accident scene is clearly defined and thus, the results are comparable for all different accidents and participants. The use of the GIDAS database and the accident sampling plan allows representative statements for the German accident scenario. With this data it is possible for the first time to have an accurate view of the road conditions at the accident scene. One possibility is a more detailed estimation of hydroplaning accidents using the actually measured water depths. The development of new testing methods and new tires can be based on the real situation of the road infrastructure. Furthermore, the combination of the technical GIDAS data and the measured road surface properties can also be used for the estimation of effectiveness of several safety systems like the brake assist and/or emergency braking systems. The calculation of a reduced collision speed due to the use of a brake assist is only one example for the application of real measured grip level data.
Having a look at safety to traffic and the prevention of accidents it can be observed that technical improvements in active safety of vehicles have let to various positive effects in this area. Among other components the tyre-road-contact takes a key role in the development of active safety technologies. All forces in accelerating, breaking and vehicle guidance have to be transmitted through the tyre-road contact area by friction forces. A common way to characterize a friction process is to identify the coefficient of friction μ between two touching materials. Even though there are several approaches to experimentially characterise road surfaces, no standard method exists. In this paper an overview of existing test methods is given. Furthermore the preliminary design of a newly developed portable test device with its possibility to investigate the tyre-road-friction of arbitrary roads or even places of accidents is shown.
The European CASPER (Child Advanced Safety Project for European Roads) project studying car child safety includes a sociological approach in order to have a better understanding of the behaviour of parents driving children under 12 years old. A questionnaire was distributed via the internet in Europe with 998 parents (representing 1638 children) from 22 European countries responding. The results inform on the way parents secure their children during a car trip. Many parents did not control how their children were installed in the child restraint system (CRS). A toddler was more likely to travel into a child seat than an older child was. Regarding misuse situations, an important part of the participants did not think that they could make mistakes when fixing the child seat to the car (26%) or when placing the child into the seat (39%). This leaves an important field of action especially by communication via different media and in the CRS sale outlets.
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.
Although the number of road accident casualties in Europe (EU27) is falling the problem still remains substantial. In 2011 there were still over 30,000 road accident fatalities. Approximately half of these were car occupants and about 60 percent of these occurred in frontal impacts. The next stage to improve a car's safety performance in frontal impacts is to improve its compatibility. The objective of the FIMCAR FP7 EU-project was to develop an assessment approach suitable for regulatory application to control a car's frontal impact and compatibility crash performance and perform an associated cost benefit analysis for its implementation. This paper reports the cost benefit analyses performed to estimate the effect of the following potential changes to the frontal impact regulation: • Option 1 " No change and allow current measures to propagate throughout the vehicle fleet. • Option 2 " Add a full width test to the current offset Deformable Barrier (ODB) test. • Option 3 " Add a full width test and replace the current ODB test with a Progressive Deformable Barrier (PDB) test. For the analyses national data were used from Great Britain (STATS 19) and from Germany (German Federal Statistical Office). In addition in-depth real word crash data were used from CCIS (Great Britain) and GIDAS (Germany). To estimate the benefit a generalised linear model, an injury reduction model and a matched pairs modelling approach were applied. The benefits were estimated to be: for Option 1 "No change" about 2.0%; for Option 2 "FW test" ranging from 5 to 12% and for Option 3 "FW and PDB tests" 9 to 14% of car occupant killed and seriously injured casualties.
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).
Nowadays human-created systems are increasing in complexity due to the interaction of humans and technology. Especially road traffic systems are composed of multitudinous resources (e.g. personnel, vehicles, organizations, etc.), which make it even harder to anticipate the positive and negative effects on safety. One key in achieving a significant reduction of fatalities is seen in driver assistant systems counterbalancing the lack of drivers' capabilities. But the actual outcome of implementing these sophisticated technologies especially on influencing driver's capabilities are yet unknown. Latest research exemplifies an increase of reaction times of drivers in case of dysfunctional driver assistant systems. This research paper applies STAMP/STPA (STAMP = systems-theoretic accident model and processes; STPA = systems-theoretic process analysis) to the German automobile traffic system focusing on the effects of driver assistant systems on drivers. By doing so, the potential hazards caused by technology can be identified.
The sequence of accident events can be classified by three essential phases, the pre-crash-sequence, the crash-sequence and the post-crash-sequence. The level of reliability of the information in the GIDAS-database (German In Depth Accident Study) is provided predominantly on the passive side. The period to evaluate active safety systems begins already in the pre-crash-sequence. The assessment of the potential of sensor- or communication-based active safety systems can only be accomplished by a detailed analysis of the pre-crash-phase. Hence the necessity to analyze the early period of the accident event in detail arises. This is possible with the help of the digital sketches of the accident site and the simulation of the accident by a simulation method of the VUFO GmbH. After simulating the pre-crash scenario it is possible to generate additional and standardized data to describe the pre-crash-sequences of an accident in a very high detail. These data are documented in a second database called the GIDAS Pre-Crash-Matrix (PCM). The PCM contains various tables with all relevant data to reproduce the pre-crash-sequence of traffic accidents from the GIDAS database until 5 seconds before the first collision. This includes parameters to describe the environment data, participant data and motion or dynamic data. This paper explains the creation of the PCM, the simulation itself and the contents and structure of the PCM. With this information of the pre-crash-sequence for various accident scenarios an improved benefit estimation and development of active safety systems can be made possible.
Rear-end collisions are the most frequent same and opposite-direction crashes. Common causes include momentary inattention, inadequate speed or inadequate distance. While most rear-end collisions in urban traffic only result in vehicle damage or slight injuries, rear-end collisions outside built-up areas or on motorways usually cause fatal or serious injuries. Driver assistance systems that detect dangerous situations in the longitudinal vehicle direction are therefore an essential safety plus. In view of this, for ADAC, systems that alert drivers to dangerous situations and initiate autonomous braking complement ESC as one of the most important active safety features in modern vehicles. The aim of ADAC is to provide consumers with technical advice and competent information about the systems available on the market. Reliable comparative tests that are based on standardised test criteria may provide motorists with important information and help them make a buying decision. In addition, they raise consumer awareness of the systems and speed up their market penetration. The assessment must focus on as many aspects of effectiveness as possible and include not only autonomous braking but also collision warning and autonomous brake assist. The work of the ADAC accident research is the development of the testing scenarios with direct link to accident situations and the identification of useful test criteria for testing.
To date, the Trauma Registry (TraumaRegister DGU-® contains data of approximately 100.000 severely injured patients, 65% of which suffered from a road traffic crash. Thus, it is the world's largest data base for severely injured patients. The article describes the development of the registry and explains how it was rolled out over Germany using the established structure of the German Trauma Network (TraumaNetzwerk DGU-®). In addition, this article presents three typical use cases from the fields of quality management, policy making and system-wide interventions, clinical research and injury prevention. In conclusion, the TraumaRegister DGU-® is a well-established tool for various purposes related to the control and reduction of the burden of road injury. Its ongoing expansion to other countries will support the goal of international benchmarking of hospitals and trauma systems.
The number of injured car occupants decreases constantly. Nevertheless, they account for nearly 50% of all fatalities and about 44% of all seriously injured persons in German traffic accidents. Further reductions of casualties require multiple efforts in all parts of traffic safety. In this paper a detailed analysis of the important pre-hospital rescue phase was done. The basis for future improvements is the knowledge about injury causation of car occupants in combination with other corresponding influence factors. For that reason more than 1.200 severe (AIS3+) injuries of frontal car occupants were analyzed. For the most relevant injuries of car occupants multivariate analysis models were created to predict the probability of these injuries in a real crash scenario. In addition to the collision severity different influence factors like impact direction, seat belt usage, age of the occupant, and gender were analyzed. Furthermore, the models were checked regarding the goodness of fit and all results all results were checked concerning their robustness. The prediction models were created on the basis of 5.000 car accidents. Afterwards, the models were validated using 4.000 different car accidents. The prediction of the probability of severe injuries could be used for different applications in the field of traffic safety. One possibility is the implementation of the models in a tool for the on-the-spot diagnosis. The background for the development of such applications is the fact, that there are only limited diagnostic possibilities available at the accident scene. Nevertheless, the rescue forces have to make essential decisions like the alerting of the necessary medical experts, appropriate treatment, the type of transportation and the choice of an adequate hospital. These decisions quite often decide between life and death or influence the long-term effects of injured persons. At this point, indications of expectable injuries could help enormously. To enable even persons with limited technical knowledge to use the tool, a procedure was developed that facilitates the assumption of the given crash severity. Another important possibility for the application of the prediction models is the use for the qualification of information sent by e-call systems.
Introduction: Spine injuries pose a considerable risk to life and quality of life. The total number of road deaths in developed countries has markedly decreased, e.g. in Germany from over 20000 in 1970 to less than 4000 in 2010, but little is known how this is reflected in the burden of spine fractures of motor vehicle users. In this study, we aimed to show the actual incidence of spine injuries among drivers and front passengers and elucidate possible dependencies between crash mechanisms and types of injuries.
The objective of the study is to measure the risk of pedestrian and bicyclist in urban traffic through an analysis of real-world accident data. The kinematics and injury mechanisms for both pedestrian and bicyclists are investigated to find the correlation of injury risks with injury related parameters. For this purpose, firstly 338 cases are selected as a sample from an IVAC accident database based on the In-depth Investigation of Vehicle Accident in Changsha of China. A statistic measurement of the fatality and serious injury risks with respect to impact speed was carried out by logistic regression analysis. Secondly, 12 pedestrian and 12 bicyclist accidents were further selected for reconstruction with MADYMO program. A comparative analysis was conducted based on the results from accident analysis and computer reconstructions for the injury risk, head impact conditions and dynamic response of pedestrians and bicyclists. The results indicate that bicyclists suffered lower risks of severe injuries and fatalities compared with pedestrians. The risks of AIS 3+ injury and fatality are 50% for pedestrians at impact speeds of 53.2 km/h and 63.3 km/h, respectively, while that for bicyclists at 62.5 km/h and 71.1 km/h, respectively. The findings could have a contribution to get a better understanding of pedestrians" and bicyclists" exposures in urban traffic in China, and provide background knowledge to generate strategies for pedestrian protection.
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.
In 2012 the fifth 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.
Injuries in motorbike accidents in correlation with protective clothes and mechanism of the accident
(2013)
This study deals with a possible connection between safety clothing / accident mechanism and injury severity in a state-wide traffic accident investigation with focus on light and small motorbike-involvement for accidents in the area of the Saarland in which the persons riding the bike have been injured or killed. An interdisciplinary team of medical scientists and engineers collected the medical and technical data as well as all the relevant traces of the accident on scene and in time. During twenty months of data collection a total of 401 cases could be gathered. Grave injuries were more common for the group of heavier motorcycles (>125 ccm). Motorcyclists had been polytraumatized only in the group where the accident was connected with a collision. Significant correlation between protective clothes and injury severity could only be found for protective gloves and protective trousers. The knowledge about mechanism of the accident, protective clothes and severity of injuries can be helpful for the improvement of road and motorcyclists' safety.
Cycle helmets have continued to increase in popularity since their introduction half a century ago. Many studies indicate that overall, head injury can be significantly reduced by wearing them. This study was conducted using two distinct sets of real-world cycling collision data from Ireland, namely cases involving police collision reports and cases involving admission to a hospital emergency department. The analyses sought to simulate and analyse the protective performance of cycle helmets in such collision scenarios, by comparing the Head Injury Criterion score and peak head accelerations, both linear and angular. Cycle collisions were simulated using the specialised commercial software MADYMO. From the simulation results, these key metrics were compared between the same-scenario helmeted and unhelmeted cyclist models. Results showed that the inclusion of bicycle helmets reduced linear accelerations very significantly, but also increased angular accelerations significantly compared to unhelmeted situations. Given the modest protective performance of cycle helmets against angular accelerations, it is recommended that cycle helmet manufacturers and international test standards need to pay more attention to head angular accelerations.
MANSSEN diskutiert das Generalthema des Forschungsseminars, ob sich "das straßenrechtliche Nutzungsregime" tatsächlich im Umbruch befindet und diagnostiziert eine Gewichtsverschiebung vom Straßenrecht hin zum Straßenverkehrsrecht. Das klassische Straßenrecht habe immer weniger zur Weiterentwicklung des Straßenwesens beizutragen. In diesem Zusammenhang behandelt er auch neue Verkehrskonzepte wie "Simply City" und "Shared Space". SIEGELs Beitrag über Grundrechtsgebrauch auf öffentlichen Straßen verdeutlicht anhand aktueller Beispiele die praktische Bedeutung des Straßenrechts bei der Verwirklichung von Grundrechten. Nach seiner Einschätzung verfügt das Straßenrecht insoweit nach wie vor ein adäquates Steuerungspotenzial. Etwaige Lücken könnten durch das Straßenverkehrsrecht, vor allem aber durch eine ergänzende Heranziehung des Polizeirechts geschlossen werden. Der Beitrag von ENDERLE über "Grenzüberschreitende Infrastrukturen " Planungs- und naturschutzrechtliche Besonderheiten" bezieht sein Anschauungsmaterial von dem Projekt der Fehmarnbelt-Querung. Als typische Abstimmungsprobleme bei der Planung und Genehmigung grenzüberschreitender Projekte behandelt sie namentlich die Frage der Linienbestimmung sowie grenzüberschreitende Verträglichkeitsprüfungen für FFH- und Vogelschutzgebiete. Der abschließende Beitrag von DURNER "Das Netzausbaubeschleunigungsgesetz 2011" stellt dar, dass die in diesem Gesetz geschaffene neue "Fachplanung" des Bundes teils Elemente des Raumordnungsverfahrens, teilweise jedoch auch solche der straßenrechtlichen Linienbestimmung und der standortbezogenen Raumordnungsziele aufweist. Letztlich folgt die Bundesfachplanung im Hinblick auf die Bindungswirkung im Wesentlichen dem Modell des -§ 4 ROG. Das Modell des NABEG mag für den Netzausbau sachgerecht sein, erscheint jedoch im sonstigen Infrastrukturbereich unrealistisch.
10 % bis 20 % der Straßenverkehrsunfälle werden auf Müdigkeit am Steuer zurückgeführt. Es steht eine Vielzahl unterschiedlicher Methoden zur Verfügung, um Müdigkeit beim Fahrer zu erkennen. Ziel des vorliegenden Projekts war es, die Stärken und Schwächen der verschiedenen Müdigkeitsmessverfahren vergleichend zu beschreiben und existierende Müdigkeitsmess- und Müdigkeitswarnsysteme im Überblick darzustellen. Die Ergebnisse beruhen auf folgender Verknüpfung von Literaturanalysen, Experten- und Nutzerbefragungen: • Literaturanalyse und zusammenfassende Darstellung von Müdigkeitsmessverfahren, die auf physiologischen und leistungsbezogenen Messgrößen beruhen. • Literaturanalyse zu Müdigkeitsmess- und Warnsystemen, Befragung der Systemhersteller und zusammenfassende Darstellung der identifizierten Systeme. • Befragung von 20 Nutzern von den in Mittel- und Oberklassefahrzeugen implementierten Müdigkeitswarnsystemen zur Beurteilung der wahrgenommenen Detektionsgüte, Akzeptanz und Compliance. • Erarbeitung eines Gütekriterienkatalogs als Grundlage für die Bewertung und den Vergleich ausgewählter Müdigkeitsmessverfahren. • Zweistufige Befragung von 12 Experten aus Industrie- und Hochschulforschung nach der Delphi-Methode. Ziel war die Auswahl und Bewertung der validesten Verfahren zur Erfassung der Fahrermüdigkeit, begründeter Zweitbewertungen bei abweichenden Urteilen und der Beurteilung ihrer Eignung für verschiedene Einsatzgebiete. • Workshop mit den Delphi-Teilnehmern zur Diskussion und Ergänzung der Delphi-Ergebnisse. Die 70 in der Fachliteratur identifizierten Müdigkeitsmesssysteme unterscheiden sich in den zugrunde liegenden Müdigkeitsmessverfahren, dem Vorliegen und der Gestaltung von Warnfunktionen und ihrer Verbreitung. Nur selten werden überzeugende Validierungsbelege oder Angaben zur Anzahl falscher und ausbleibender Alarme angeführt. Aus Nutzersicht bieten die derzeit in Mittel- und Oberklassemodellen verfügbaren Müdigkeitswarnsysteme oftmals keine zufriedenstellende Detektionsgüte. Vielfach wird die Fahrt trotz detektierter und selbst eingestandener Müdigkeit fortgesetzt. Ca. die Hälfte der Fahrer sieht in der Nutzung der Müdigkeitswarnsysteme einen Zuwachs an Sicherheit. Zu den validesten Müdigkeitsmessverfahren gehören aus Expertensicht die Erfassung der Fahrperformanz (Lenkverhalten und Spurhaltung) und des Lidschlussverhaltens, das videobasierte Expertenrating, das EEG und der Pupillografische Schläfrigkeitstest. Die unterschiedlichen Stärken und Schwächen der sechs ausgewählten Messverfahren werden im Bericht detailliert aufgeführt. Nach wie vor existiert kein Goldstandard zur Müdigkeitserfassung. Je nach Einsatzgebiet sind entweder alle sechs ausgewählten Messverfahren (Forschung & Entwicklung), nur einige (Müdigkeitswarnsystem im Fahrzeug) oder kein einziges (Verkehrskontrolle) geeignet. Die Auswahl der Messverfahren sollte daher in Abhängigkeit des jeweiligen Ziels und Kontexts der Müdigkeitserfassung erfolgen und die spezifischen Stärke-Schwächenprofile berücksichtigen. Eine valide Müdigkeitserfassung bedarf der Kombination von mindestens zwei Messverfahren. Bedarf besteht in der Optimierung und der begleitenden Evaluierung der Müdigkeitswarnsysteme im Fahrzeug und der vielversprechendsten Messverfahren. Weitere Maßnahmen zur wirksamen Reduzierung müdigkeitsbedingter Unfälle wurden im Rahmen des Expertenworkshops diskutiert und im Bericht dargelegt.