82 Unfall und Verkehrsinfrastruktur
Filtern
Dokumenttyp
- Konferenzveröffentlichung (16) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Conference (15)
- Konferenz (15)
- Accident (9)
- Unfall (9)
- Unfallverhütung (6)
- Accident prevention (5)
- Deutschland (5)
- Germany (5)
- On the spot accident investigation (5)
- Safety (5)
- Sicherheit (5)
- Untersuchung am Unfallort (5)
- Data acquisition (4)
- Datenerfassung (4)
- Reconstruction (accid) (4)
- Unfallrekonstruktion (4)
- Fahrzeug (3)
- Fatality (3)
- Tödlicher Unfall (3)
- Vehicle (3)
- Analyse (math) (2)
- Analysis (math) (2)
- Audit (2)
- Behaviour (2)
- Beinahe Unfall (2)
- Cause (2)
- Coefficient of friction (2)
- Data bank (2)
- Datenbank (2)
- Education (2)
- Eins (2)
- Erziehung (2)
- Geschwindigkeit (2)
- Griffigkeit (2)
- Highway design (2)
- Interview (2)
- Measurement (2)
- Messung (2)
- Near miss (2)
- Oberflächentextur (2)
- One (2)
- Prevention (2)
- Reibungsbeiwert (2)
- Road network (2)
- Skidding resistance (2)
- Speed (2)
- Statistics (2)
- Statistik (2)
- Straßenentwurf (2)
- Straßennetz (2)
- Surface texture (2)
- Unfallschwerpunkt (2)
- Ursache (2)
- Vegetation (2)
- Verhalten (2)
- Abkommen von der Fahrbahn (1)
- Abkommen von der Fahrbahn (Unfall) (1)
- Accident black spot (1)
- Accident data (1)
- Accident prone location (1)
- Accident rate (1)
- Adolescent (1)
- Air bag (restraint system) (1)
- Airbag (1)
- Angle (1)
- Arbeitsgruppe (1)
- Aufzeichnung (1)
- Australia (1)
- Australien (1)
- Austria (1)
- Baum (1)
- Bepflanzung (1)
- Berechnung (1)
- Bewertung (1)
- Calculation (1)
- Camera (1)
- Cervical vertebrae (1)
- Collision (1)
- Cyclist (1)
- Data transmission (telecom) (1)
- Datenübertragung (Telekom) (1)
- Depth (1)
- Detection (1)
- Detektion (1)
- Digital image processing (1)
- Digitale Bildverarbeitung (1)
- Driver (1)
- Driver training (1)
- Enforcement (law) (1)
- Europa (1)
- Europe (1)
- Evaluation (1)
- Fahranfänger (1)
- Fahrausbildung (1)
- Fahrer (1)
- Finland (1)
- Finnland (1)
- Forschungsarbeit (1)
- Gesetzesdurchführung (1)
- Halswirbel (1)
- Harmonisation (1)
- Harmonisierung (1)
- Highway (1)
- Human factor (1)
- Image analysis (1)
- Image generation (1)
- Improvement (1)
- Injury (1)
- Ireland (1)
- Irland (1)
- Jugendlicher (1)
- Kamera (1)
- Kontrolle (1)
- Kreisverkehrsplatz (1)
- Malaysia (1)
- Mathematical model (1)
- Menschlicher Faktor (1)
- Method (1)
- Motorcycle (1)
- Motorrad (1)
- Nasse Strasse (1)
- Nigeria (1)
- Organisation (1)
- Organization (1)
- Ort (Position) (1)
- Overturning (veh) (1)
- Planning (1)
- Planung (1)
- Position (1)
- Radfahrer (1)
- Recently qualified driver (1)
- Rechenmodell (1)
- Recording (1)
- Research projekt (1)
- Risikobewertung (1)
- Risk assessment (1)
- Road traffic (1)
- Roadside (1)
- Roundabout (1)
- Run off the road (accid) (1)
- Run oo the road (accid) (1)
- Safety fence (1)
- Saftey (1)
- Schutzeinrichtung (1)
- Schweden (1)
- Sensor (1)
- Sicherheitsgurt (1)
- Simulation (1)
- Software (1)
- Spinal column (1)
- Straße (1)
- Straßenseitenfläche (1)
- Straßenverkehr (1)
- Surveillance (1)
- Sweden (1)
- Tiefe (1)
- Traffic (1)
- Traffic restraint (1)
- Unfalldaten (1)
- Unfallhäufigkeit (1)
- United kingdom (1)
- Verbesserung (1)
- Vereinigtes Königreich (1)
- Verfahren (1)
- Verhütung (1)
- Verkehr (1)
- Verkehrsbeschränkung (1)
- Verkehrsinfrastruktur (1)
- Verletzung (1)
- Wasser (1)
- Water (1)
- Wet road (1)
- Winkel (1)
- Wirbelsäule (1)
- Working group (1)
- Zusammenstoß (1)
- Österreich (1)
- Überschlagen (1)
Institut
- Sonstige (16) (entfernen)
Nigeria ranks one of the highest countries in the world with the largest accident, especially when measured by whiplash associated disorders, whereas, traffic safety education rate, data and information been widely known as preventive indicators have been grossly neglected. In Nigeria, traffic safety enlightenment, awareness, political understanding and appreciation of the problem's magnitude are lacking. This study, therefore, seeks to understand and document the fact that accident causation factors in Nigeria relate more to the problem of development, poverty, knowledge and education as evidenced in most other developing countries. Among the primary accident causation factors on Nigerian roads are: - lack of a transportation system or multi-model integration - sub-standard and obsolete vehicles and road furniture - poor road maintenance, investment and engineering management - paucity of road users' and drivers' knowledge, skill, enlightenment and education of the road Use This paper submits that Nigeria being a developing nation requires purely primitive strategies being cost effective (health wise) than curative measures. It is in this light that an enduring, comprehensive and sustainable traffic safety educational programmes information base and data inventory, analysis and implementations form the focus of this study. This effort will provide basic guidelines framework and implementation procedure for a successful prevention of whiplash associated disorder resulting from road traffic crashes in Nigeria and other parts of the world.
Interaction of road environment, vehicle and human factors in the causation of pedestrian accidents
(2005)
The UK On-the-Spot project (OTS) completed over 1500 in-depth investigations of road accidents during 2000-2003 and is continuing for a further 3 years. Cases were sampled from two regions of England using rotating shifts to cover all days of the week and all hours of the day and night. Research teams were dispatched to accidents notified to police during the shifts; arrival time to the scene of the accident was generally less than 20 minutes. The methodology of OTS includes sophisticated systems for describing accident causation and the interaction of road, vehicle and human factors. The purpose of this paper is to describe and illustrate these systems by reference to pedestrian accidents. This type of analysis is intended to provide an insight into how and why pedestrian accidents occur in order to assist the development of effective road, vehicle and behavioural countermeasures.
In Finland all fatal motor vehicle accidents are studied in-depth on-the-spot by multidisciplinary (police, road and vehicle engineers, physician and behavioural scientist) road accident investigation teams (legislation 2001, work started 1968), which operate in every province. The purpose of the teams is to uncover risk factors that turned an ordinary driving situation into a serious accident and give safety recommendations for improving road safety. The investigation teams do not take a stand on guilt or insurance compensation. When analysing accidents the teams use the concepts of key event, immediate, background and injury risk factors. Compiled investigation folders of each case contain investigation forms from each member, preinvestigation protocol, photographs, sketches etc. About 500 items of information are collected from each accident party. The collected information is also coded into a computer database. Both the database and the investigation folders are widely utilized by researchers and authorities conducting safety work.
The National Roads Authority in Ireland is responsible for planning and supervision of construction and maintenance works on the National Road network. Its primary function is "to secure the provision of a safe and efficient network of national roads". The population of Ireland has grown rapidly from 3.5 million to 4 million within the past 10 years, and vehicle ownership has also risen rapidly to 2 million vehicles, with 2.2 million drivers. Collisions rates in Ireland are at approximately 1.5 collisions per 1,000 population (in 2002), and 8.4 deaths per 1,000,000 population (in 2003). This ranked 8th out of the 15 countries in the European Union at the time. Ireland- current Road Safety Strategy includes Engineering Targets. These are to complete construction of certain lengths of new motorway, dual carriageway and 2+1 highway, to implement a certain number of accident remedial and traffic calming schemes, and to implement road safety audit on all new schemes. The accident remedial schemes, traffic calming schemes, and road safety audit are all the responsibility of the Road Safety section of NRA. The road safety programme of the NRA is divided into four main areas; a) accident remedial measures at individual sites, b) accident remedial treatment of entire routes, c) traffic calming of towns and villages on main roads, d) road safety audit. Examples of these measures are described. Evaluation of past programmes of single site accident remedial measures show a reduction in collision occurrence at these sites, but the effectiveness and the economic rate of return is decreasing over successive programmes. A similar programme has now been adopted on the rest of the country- road network, on regional and local roads. The programme of remedial treatment of entire routes has only recently started and has not been evaluated. Evaluation of the first programme of traffic calming of towns and villages shows an overall decrease in collisions and their severity, and a small reduction in speed. Road Safety Audit, examining new schemes a number of times during design and after construction, has been standard procedure on the national road network for nearly 6 years. An evaluation is currently underway.
The European Union has set a target to reduce all road fatalities (over 40,000) with 50% in 2010. This target percentage remained unchanged with the introduction of the ten new member states within the EU as by May 1st, 2004. According to Eurostat, 34% of all fatalities in 1998 in the, then, fifteen states of the European Union were the result of single vehicle collisions. This represents over 14,000 lives lost each year of which many can likely be saved through better roadside infrastructure design. The challenge for road safety professionals is to find methods and design strategies that help to reduce these casualties. Procedures for full-scale vehicle crash testing of guard rails were first published in the US in 1962. Present European regulation is mainly based on these procedures and later developments. Since then the vehicle fleet has changed considerably. Due to the complexity of the actual safety problem the numerical simulation approach offers a good opportunity to evaluate the different parameters involved in road safety, such as infrastructure properties, vehicle type, vehicle occupants and injuries. The ideal situation would be that simulation tools are coupled or integrated and all involved effects would be related. At the moment this is not the case yet, but initiatives are taken and a new virtual era has started. This paper offers a method looking at two components that encompass the driving environment: the car and the guardrail. As part of the EC-funded project, RISER (Roadside Infrastructure for Safer European Roads) a multi body simulation program study is carried out to determine sensitivities of some parameters in car to guardrail collisions and gives insides in performance of the car with passive safety equipment, the guardrail and the interaction of these objects with each other. By offering a set of methods that includes these two aspects and their intertwining relations, more confidence can be gained in actually reducing fatalities due to single vehicle collisions with, or due to, roadside furniture. Reducing the number of fatalities of single vehicle crashes would contribute greatly to the stated goal of reducing casualties altogether.
In a first step, we have examined approximately 23 000 single vehicle accidents within the Austrian National Statistics database. In a second step, we considered 15% of all fatal "running off the road" accidents that occurred in Austria in 2003. As a result, two accident categories were specified; "leaving the road without preceding manoeuvre" and "leaving the road with preceding manoeuvre". These two categories can be basically characterised by the vehicle- heading angle and its velocity angle. In this report, we further suggest theoretical approaches for the dimensioning of a safety zone, an area adjacent to the road free of fixed objects or dangerous slopes. We also show the link between the two accident categories mentioned above and the real world accidents analysed in detail. These observations also form the basis for the required length for safety devices. Finally, we summarise accident avoidance strategies.
Adverse weather could impair the performance of many important parts in road transportation. In a tropical country, the threats posed by the weather phenomenon can be viewed from a different perspective as the situation may not be as extreme as snow-related problems or excessive temperature in other countries. Specifically in Malaysia, the situation may be underestimated due to several reasons such as the deficiencies in accident reporting and lack of research work. This background research has looked into various publications as well as related data to explain the need of more comprehensive research in the future.
Tree impacts are still one of the most important focal points of road deaths in Germany. For the year 2008, the latest figures in the national statistics show a share of 28% of road users killed in crashes with trees alongside a road amongst all crashes on rural roads (except the Autobahn). The official German statistics show the attribute "impact on a tree" since 1995. For this first reported year, the share of road users killed in such crashes was 30%. During the last 14 years, fatal accidents with road users killed on rural roads (except the Autobahn) after impacts on a tree declined by 60% from 1,737 (year 1995) to 696 (year 2008). But this is more or less in line with the general evolution of vehicle and traffic safety in Germany. For Germany as a whole the accident statistics do not show a reduction for "treer crashes" which is clearly more than the average for all accidents. But, as shown with the paper, there are different evolutions in the several German States. In public awareness the topic "tree impacts" is mostly associated with the situation in Germany after the reunification. At that time a lot of road users were killed on the avenues in the so called "new countries". The fact that "tree impacts" are still a big share within the figure of killed road users seems to be little-known. Using updated information coming from the official statistics and in-depth-studies, accident researchers can identify a big potential for further improvements of traffic safety on the associated district roads, state roads and federal highways. There is still a need to analyse more details of the accident occurrence with impacts on trees to generate new and updated findings on the current limits and potentials of measures to improve vehicle and traffic safety. To make further efforts in reducing the figures of victims of "tree impacts" the intensification of well-known conventional solutions " for example implementation of guard rails and reduction of speed - is an option. Measures related to vehicle safety technology especially in the field of primary (active) safety will have additional benefit within the physically imposed limits. With this background it can be seen that the subject "tree impacts" should be analysed with a holistic approach taking into account the entire system of driver, vehicle, road, the environment and a social consensus as well.
The role of a national motor vehicle crash causation study-style data set in rollover data analysis
(2010)
On 1 January 2005, The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, an agency of the United States Department of Transportation, implemented a new data collection strategy designed to assess crash avoidance technologies and report associated behavioral inputs and outcomes. The original goal was a six-year program, however, during the shortened data collection period; it proved a valuable resource for understanding a precrash environment previously obscured by forensic case investigation. Another unintended consequence was an overlap with infrastructure, roadway geometry, and design with the occupant and vehicle outcomes, by virtue of well-defined attributes. External to the collected data, supplementary information was extrapolated, by using manuals published in the United States, by the American Association of State Highway Transportation Officials and selected State Departments of Transportation, in conjunction with the National Motor Vehicle Crash Causation Study (NMVCCS). This provided a backdrop to the infrastructure framework of the rollover problem within which the occupant and vehicle outcomes were studied. If a NMVCCS-style data collection were to be implemented elsewhere, then complementary manuals produced by federal transportation officials might be consulted producing similar relationships. The current study uses NMVCCS data to describe vehicles travelling through diverse design geometries and the outcome for occupants involved in crashes within that system. Codified and extrapolated data form the basis for assessing NMVCCS and its value to the transportation safety community, as the protocols are applicable universally. The benefit in continuing a NMVCCS-style study is noted, as the interaction of roadway infrastructure and occupant protection agencies might find paths to better work together in solving the complex rollover problem using a common data-driven approach.
Die Unfallzahlen für das Jahr 2008 zeigen, dass die intensiven Anstrengungen für die Verkehrssicherheit weiterhin Früchte tragen. Nachdem im Jahr 2007 mit 220 Toten auch in Rheinland-Pfalz der geringste Stand seit Einführung der Unfallstatistik registriert wurde, konnte dieser Trend auch im Jahr 2008 bestätigt werden. Die Verkehrssicherheitsarbeit in Rheinland-Pfalz sieht sich dabei zunächst im Kontext des anspruchsvollen Ziels der EU, die Zahl der Verkehrstoten bis 2010 zu halbieren. Im Mittelpunkt steht dabei die Frage, wie die Risiken im Verkehrsverhalten der Menschen minimiert werden können. Vorhandene Sicherheitspotenziale sollen genutzt werden, Maßnahmen sind gezielt auf die Brennpunkte im Verkehrsgeschehen auszurichten. Neben Sicherheitsaktionen und Trainings für die Verkehrsteilnehmer sowie der Polizeiarbeit ist einer der wichtigsten Ansätze die Verbesserung der Infrastruktur. Zu den Maßnahmen auf diesem Gebiet zählen neue Ansätze beispielsweise bei der Überprüfung sicherheitsrelevanter Aspekte schon in der Planung, beim Bau moderner Verkehrsbeeinflussungsanlagen oder bei der Sicherheit an Bahnübergängen und in Tunnels. Ein Fokus liegt jedoch auf der Unfallkommissionsarbeit. Sie ist ein wesentlicher Bestandteil der Gesamtkonzeption zur Verbesserung der Verkehrssicherheit. Das Land Rheinland-Pfalz verfügt seit nunmehr über 35 Jahren über institutionalisierte Erfahrungen auf diesem Gebiet, die auch als Beispiel für die bundesweite Entwicklung dienten. In einem weiteren Schritt werden seit kurzem in einer landesweiten Unfallkonferenz nunmehr Programmschwerpunkte wie beispielsweise die Bekämpfung von Motorradunfällen oder Baumunfällen definiert. Zudem wurden mit einem aufwändigen Programm allen der etwa 400 Unfallkommissionsmitglieder in Rheinland-Pfalz Schulungen angeboten. Eine permanente Nachschulung garantiert dabei einen gleichbleibend hohen Wissensstand. Beispielgebend ist allerdings auch die zentrale Unfallauswertestelle beim Landesbetrieb Mobilität in Koblenz, die es in dieser Form so nur noch in Bayern gibt. Mit ihr steht seit vielen Jahren ein Instrument zur Verfügung, das nicht nur die Grundlagen für gezielte und effektive Verkehrssicherheitsmaßnahmen schafft, sondern auch landesweite Controllings durchführt. Ohne eine finanzielle Ausstattung ist jedoch eine effektive Unfallkommissionsarbeit nicht möglich. Aus diesem Grund wurde als Novum ein spezieller Haushaltsansatz geschaffen, der gezielt ausschließlich im Sinne der Verkehrssicherheit - derzeit mit dem Schwerpunkt Baumunfälle und Motorradsicherheit - eingesetzt wird. Dabei wurde auch in einem Bewertungsverfahren zum Ausbauplan für Landesstraßen die Verkehrssicherheit so gewichtet, dass speziell Unfallhäufungsstellen in die Prioritätenreihung gelangen. Diese Ansätze mit Strategien aus einer Landesunfallkonferenz, gezielter Schulung, finanzieller Ausstattung sowie Unterstützung und Controlling durch eine zentrale Unfallauswertestelle sind zugleich Chance und Herausforderung für eine künftige Verkehrssicherheitsarbeit.