Sonstige
Im Rahmen eines Gemeinschaftsprojektes der Technischen Universität München und des ADAC, Abteilung Verkehrstechnik, wurden im süddeutschen Autobahnnetz 4 Messstellen eingerichtet, an denen seit 1976 bzw. 1977 monatliche lokale Geschwindigkeiten und Fahrzeugabstände erhoben werden. Von der Bundesanstalt für straßenwesen wurden seit 1978 sieben weitere Messstellen auf dem nord- und westdeutschen Autobahnnetz eingerichtet, an denen zweimal jährlich Messungen durchgeführt werden. Damit können Trends und Entwicklungen im Geschwindigkeits- und Abstandsverhalten erkannt werden. Der Bericht gliedert sich in die Beschreibung der Voruntersuchung, die Beschreibung der Erweiterung der Analyse auf das Autobahnnetz und die Darstellung der Ergebnisse aller Erhebungen. Ein Rückschluss auf das absolute Geschwindigkeitsniveau im Gesamtnetz kann aus den Ergebnissen der einzelnen Messstellen nicht abgeleitet werden.
OKSTRA, so heißt der Objektkatalog für das Straßen- und Verkehrswesen. Im Rahmen des Forschungsprojektes "Standardisierung graphischer Daten im Straßen- und Verkehrswesen" werden die Objekte des Straßen- und Verkehrswesens in ihrer Bedeutung, ihrer Struktur und ihren Beziehungen untereinander definiert. Ziel dieses Objektkatalogs ist die Gewährleistung eines standardisierten Datenaustausches sowohl innerhalb von Arbeitsprozessen einer Verwaltung als auch mit externen Institutionen. Die Definitionen der Objekte sind inhaltlich nicht grundlegend neu, vielmehr werden im OKSTRA im wesentlichen die Objekte der vorhandenen Regelwerke und Standards des Straßen- und Verkehrswesens harmonisiert. Zunächst wurde eine Studie erstellt, in der der Datenfluss in einer Straßenbauverwaltung von der Grundlagenermittlung bis zur Bestandsdokumentation analysiert und alle beteiligten Regelwerke und Standards aufgezeigt werden. Weiterhin werden Vorschläge für die Modellierung und Speicherung der Objekte gemacht. Auf der Grundlage dieser Studie werden die Objekte definiert. Der dabei entstehende Objektkatalog OKSTRA bietet erstmalig eine Gesamtübersicht aller Objektbereiche des Straßen- und Verkehrswesens mit ihren Standards und Regelwerken. Im Bericht werden die Notwendigkeit und der Nutzen dieses Standards sowie die Vorgehensweise zu seiner noch laufenden Entwicklung beschrieben.
An approach to the standardization of accident and injury registration systems (STAIRS) in Europe
(1998)
STAIRS is a European Commission funded study whose aim is to produce a set of guidelines for a harmonised, crash injury database. The need to evaluate the effectiveness of the forthcoming European Union front and side impact directives has emphasised the need for real world crash injury data-sets that can be representative of the crash population throughout Europe. STAIRS will provide a methodology to achieve this. The ultimate aim of STAIRS is to produce a set of data collection tools which will aid decision making on vehicle crashworthiness as well as providing a means to evaluate the effectiveness of safety regulations. This paper will disseminate the up-to-date findings of the group as they try to harmonise their methods. The stage has been reached where studies into the diverse methods of the UK, French and German systems of crash injury investigation have been undertaken. An assessment has already been made of the relationships between the three current systems in order to define the areas of agreement and divergence. The conclusions reached stated that there were many areas that are already closely related and that the differences were only at the detailed level. With the emphasis on secondary safety and injury causation, core data sets were decided upon, taking into account: vehicle description, collision configuration, structural response of vehicles, restraint and airbag performance, child restraint performance, Euro NCAP, pedestrian and vehicle occupant kinematics, injury description and causation. Each variable was studied objectively, the important elements isolated and developed into a form that all partners were agreeable on. A glossary of terms is being developed as the project progresses which includes ISO standards and other definitions from the associated CAREPLUS project, which addresses the comparability of national data sets. A major consideration of the group was the data collection method to be employed. The strengths and weaknesses of each study were investigated to obtain a clear idea of which aspects offered the best way forward. The quality of this information and transference into a common format, as well as the necessary error checking systems to be employed have just been completed and are described. In tandem with this area of study the problem of the statistical relationship of each sample to the national population is also being investigated. The study proposes a mechanism to use a sample of crash injury data to represent the national and international crash injury problem
Data concerning accidents involving personal injury which have been collected in the context of in-depth investigations on scene in the Hannover area since 1973 and in the Dresden area since 1999 represent an important basis for empirical traffic safety research. At national and international level various analyses and comparisons are carried out on the basis of "in-depth data" from the above mentioned investigations. In-depth data play a decisive role e.g. within the validation of EuroNCAP results on secondary safety (crashworthiness) of individual passenger car models. Thus, statistically sound methods of data analysis and population parameter estimation are of high importance. Since the 1st of August 1984 the "in-depth investigations on scene" in the Hannover area have been carried out according to a sampling plan developed by HAUTZINGER in the context of a research project on behalf of BASt. In the meantime a second region of in-depth investigation on scene was added with surveys in Dresden and the surrounding area. Internationally, the acronym GIDAS (German In-Depth Accident Study) is commonly used for the two above mentioned surveys. The objective of a current research project (topic of this contribution) is, among other things, to examine and adjust the previous weighting and expansion method for the two regional accident investigations to the current general conditions.
An die Lichtsignalsteuerung richten sich hohe Qualitätsanforderungen, da ihr für einen sicheren und flüssigen Verkehrsablauf im Straßennetz eine wichtige Rolle zukommt. Um eine hohe Qualität der Lichtsignalsteuerung auch im wachsenden Altbestand von Anlagen zu gewährleisten, liegt es nahe, eine regelmäßige, systematische Überprüfung vorzunehmen, um Mängel frühzeitig erkennen und beheben zu können. Ziel des Forschungsvorhabens war es, eine aufwandsoptimierte Verfahrensweise und die notwendigen Hilfsmittel für ein systematisches Qualitätsmanagement für Lichtsignalanlagen (LSA) zu entwickeln. Hierzu wurde zunächst die Lichtsignalsteuerung als Gegenstand des Qualitätsmanagements eingehend erörtert. Auf dieser Grundlage wurden Verfahrensweisen und EDV-gestützte Hilfsmittel entwickelt, mit denen die Güte des Verkehrsablaufs und die Verkehrssicherheit im Straßennetz und an einzelnen Knotenpunkten mit geringem Aufwand überprüft werden kann. Zur Qualitätsbewertung werden Unfalldaten, Prozessdaten und Betriebsdaten analysiert sowie der Verkehrsablauf vor Ort beobachtet. Der Aufbau einer Wissensbasis diente dazu, den Kenntnisstand zu Möglichkeiten der Qualitätsverbesserung an Lichtsignalanlagen für die Anwendung verfügbar zu machen. Hierin sind typische Qualitätsmaengel an Lichtsignalanlagen mit Möglichkeiten der Abhilfe verknüpft. Ferner sind Prüfbedingungen der Eignung und Umsetzbarkeit der Maßnahmen hinterlegt. Mit Hilfe dieses Expertensystems können Maßnahmen identifiziert und bewertet werden. Die Anwendung des Verfahrens an verschiedenen Knotenpunkten zeigt, dass der systematische und modulare Aufbau gut geeignet ist, aussagekräftige Informationen zur Qualität der Lichtsignalsteuerung zu erlangen und geeignete Maßnahmen zur Qualitätsverbesserung zu identifizieren. Das Verfahren kann mit geringem Aufwand durchgeführt werden und kann daher einen Beitrag für die verbreitete Anwendung des Qualitätsmanagements für Lichtsignalanlagen leisten.
The need for improved EU level accident information and data was identified in the EU White Paper on Transport Policy (2001)1 and detailed in the Road Safety Action Plan (2003)2. The plan specifies that the EC will develop a road safety observatory to coordinate data collection within an integrated framework.
This study is aimed to investigate the correlations of impact conditions and dynamic responses with the injuries and injury severity of child pedestrians by accident reconstruction. For this purpose, the pedestrian accident cases were selected from Sweden and Germany with detailed information about injuries, accident cars, and accident environment. The selected accident cases were reconstructed using mathematical models of pedestrian and passenger car. The pedestrian models were generated based on the height, weight, and age of the pedestrian involved in accidents. The car models were built up based on the corresponding accident car. The impact speeds in simulations were defined based on the reported data. The calculated physical quantities were analyzed to find the correlation with injury outcomes registered in the accident database. The reconstruction approaches are discussed in terms of data collection, estimating vehicle impact speeds, pedestrian moving speeds and initial posture, secondary ground impact, validity of the mathematical models, as well as impact biomechanics.
Road safety is a major preoccupation of the European Commission and the road transport industry and depends on numerous significant factors. In order to improve road safety and to plan effective safety improvement actions for truck transport, we must first identify the problems to be addressed, i.e. what are the main causes of truck accidents. The ETAC project, initiated by the European Commission and the IRU, was launched in order to set up a heavy goods vehicle accident causation study across European countries to identify future actions which could contribute to the improvement of road safety. The results will be based on a detailed analysis of truck accident data collected in seven European countries according to a common methodology which has been elaborated through numerous national and European projects. This paper describes the common methodology used to collect the information on the scene of the accident and to analyse the data so that the reconstruction of the crash events may be carried out. CEESAR proposes a methodology using its experience gained from over 10 years of accident data collection. This methodology is based on an in-depth investigation of the parameters involved in-an accident and linked to the driver, the vehicle, the road and their environment. In-depth investigation requires accident investigator presence on the scene of the accident in order to collect volatile information such as marks on the road, weather conditions, visibility, state and equipment of the vehicle, driver interview. Later, passive and active information is gathered, either at the hospital for the driver, at the garage for the vehicle or on the spot for the road geometry. A reconstruction carried out with the help of specific software and the analysis of the data collected and calculated enables the identification of the main causes of the accident and the future actions to plan in order to improve road safety as regards truck traffic.
Mit Hilfe der Datenbestände von 7 Städten werden die Grundlagen für eine praxisgerechte Weiterentwicklung des Bewertungsverfahrens für den messtechnisch erfassten Zustand von Innerortsstraßen mit den erforderlichen Normierungsfunktionen, den Ziel-, Warn- und Schwellenwerten und maßgeblichen Funktionsklassen erarbeitet. Für die Auswerteabschnitte ergab sich eine Länge von 10 m als sinnvoll, aus der problemlos Zustandsindikatoren auch für längere Abschnitte ermittelt werden können. Die bisher verwendeten Zustandsindikatoren für die Längsebenheit, Querebenheit und Substanz werden auf ihre Brauchbarkeit untersucht und verbesserte beziehungsweise neue Indikatoren mit den dazugehörigen Normierungsfunktionen vorgeschlagen. Für die Griffigkeit standen keine Analysedaten zur Verfügung. Hier konnte für die Festlegung von Ziel-, Warn- und Schwellenwerten auf entsprechende Normierungsfunktionen für Außerortsstraßen zurückgegriffen werden. Weiterhin werden Vorschläge für die Verknüpfung zum Gebrauchs-und Substanzwert erarbeitet. Für die Relativierung der Anforderungen an den Zustand von Asphaltfahrbahnen werden zwei Funktionsklassen für die Straßenkategorien "Hauptverkehrs-/verkehrs-/Sammelstraßen" (FK 1) und "Anlieger-/Wohnstraßen" (FK 2) vorgeschlagen. Weiterhin wird eine dritte Funktionsklasse für Pflasterstraßen eingeführt. Ihre unterschiedlichen Normierungsfunktionen gewährleisten bei gleichen Zustandsausprägungen eine unterschiedliche Einstufung der Dringlichkeit von Maßnahmearten. Die Untersuchungsergebnisse sind zusätzlich in Form eines Arbeitspapiers aufbereitet.
Empirical vehicle crashworthiness studies are usually based on national or in-depth traffic accident surveys: Data on accident-involved cars/drivers are analysed in order to quantify the chance of driver injury and to assess certain risk factors like car make and model. As the cars/drivers involved in the same accident form a "cluster", where the size of the cluster equals the number of accident-involved parties, traffic accident survey data are typical multi-level data with accidents as first-level or primary and cars/drivers as secondlevel or secondary units (car occupants in general are to be considered as third level units). Consequently, appropriate statistical multi-level models are to be used for driver injury risk estimation purposes as these models properly account for the cluster structure of traffic accident survey data. In recent years various types of regression models for clustered data have been developed in the statistical sciences. This paper presents multi-level statistical models, which are generally applicable for vehicle crashworthiness assessment in the sense that data on single and multiple car crashes can be analysed simultaneously. As a special case of multi-level modelling driver injury risk estimation based on paired-by-collision car/driver data is considered. It is demonstrated that assessment results may be seriously biased, if the cluster structure inherent in traffic accident survey data is erroneously ignored in the data analysis stage.
In the context of this study, different data sources for accident research were examined regarding their possible data access and evaluated concerning the individual quality and extent of the data. Analyses of accidents require detailed and comprehensive information in particular concerning vehicle damages, injury patterns and descriptions of the accident sequence. The police documentation supplies the basic accident statistics and is amended in the context of the forensic treatment by further information, e.g. by medical and technical appraisals and witness questionings. As a new approach to the data acquisition for the analysis of fatal traffic accidents, the information was made usable which was collected by the police and by the investigations of the public prosecutor. The best strategy for obtaining reliable, extensive and complete data consists of combining the information from these two sources: the very complete, but elementary statistic data of the Niedersächsisches Landesamt für Statistik (Lower Saxony State Authority of Statistics), based on the police documentation as well as the very extensive accident information resulting from the investigation documentation of the public prosecutor after conclusion of the procedure, the so-called Court Records. Of all 715 fatal traffic accidents, which happened in the year 2003 in the German State of Lower Saxony, 238 cases were selected by means of a statistically coincidental selective procedure based on a statistically representative manner (every third accident). These cases cover the investigation documents of the 11 responsible public prosecutor- offices, which were requested and evaluated while preserving the data security. Of the 238 cases 202 cases were available, which were individually coded and stored in a data base using 160 variables. Thus a data base of a sample of representative data for fatal accidents in Lower Saxony was set up. The data base contains extensive information concerning general accident data (35 variables), concerning road and road surface data (30 variables), concerning vehicle-specific data (68 variables) as well as concerning personal and injury data (27 variables).
Die Qualität der Beeinflussung und der Information des Verkehrsteilnehmers ist in hohem Maße abhängig von der Qualität der erhobenen Verkehrsdaten. Aus diesem Grunde stellt sich die Frage: welche Qualitätsanforderungen sind an die Verkehrsdatenerfassung zu stellen und wie wird sichergestellt, dass die Qualitätsanforderungen auch im laufenden Betrieb über Jahre hinweg eingehalten werden? In einem Arbeitskreis der FGSV wurden Hinweise zur Qualitätsanforderung und Qualitätssicherung der lokalen Verkehrsdatenerfassung für Verkehrsbeeinflussungsanlagen entwickelt. Das hier vorgestellte Hinweispapier, das von der FGSV veröffentlicht wurde, soll die Betreiber von Verkehrsbeeinflussungsanlagen dabei unterstützen, die Qualitätsanforderung an die lokale Verkehrsdatenerfassung zu erfüllen und im laufenden Betrieb dauerhaft sicherzustellen.
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.
Annually within the European Union, there are over 50,000 road accident fatalities and 2 million other casualties, of which the majority are either the occupants of cars or other road users in collision with a car. The European Commission now has competency for vehicle-based injury countermeasures through the Whole Vehicle Type Approval system. As a result, the Commission has recognised that casualty reduction strategies must be based on a full understanding of the real-world need under European conditions and that the effectiveness of vehicle countermeasures must be properly evaluated. The PENDANT study commenced in January 2003 in order to explore the possibility of developing a co-ordinated set of targeted, in-depth crash data resources to support European Union vehicle and road safety policy. Three main work activity areas (Work Packages) commenced to provide these resources. This paper describes some of the outcomes of Work Package 2 (WP2, In-depth Crash Investigations and Data Analysis). In WP2, some 1,100 investigations of crashes involving injured car occupants were conducted in eight EU countries to a common protocol based on that developed in the STAIRS programme. This paper describes the purposes, methodology and results of WP2. It is expected that the results will be used as a co-ordinated system to inform European vehicle safety policy in a systematic, integrated manner. Furthermore, the results of the data analyses will be exploited further to provide new directions to develop injury countermeasures and regulations.
76 severe traffic accidents had been investigated in depth in an ongoing Volkswagen-Tongji University joint accident research project in JiaDing district, Shanghai, PR China since June 2005. With a methodology similar to German accident research units in Dresden and Hannover, a research team proceeds to the scene immediately after the incident to investigate and collect various data on environment, accident occurrence, vehicle state and deformations as well as injuries. The data combined with the results of accident reconstruction will be stored in a database for further statistical and casuistic analysis. The first outcome of the project supports the hypothesis that a main causation for the large number of traffic accidents in China is the lacking of risk awareness in Chinese driver behaviour. Low seat-belt use and the high proportion of vulnerable and poorly protected two-wheelers in traffic are reasons for the high injury and fatality rate in China. The research work shows that accident research in China is feasible and able to give support to tackle one of the urging problems in Chinese development.
Internationally, the need is expressed for harmonized traffic accident data collection (PSN, PENDANT, etc.). Together with this effort of harmonization, traffic accident investigation moves more and more in the direction of accident causation. As current methods only partly address these needs, a new method was set up. The main characteristics of this method are: • Accident/injury causation (associated) factors can objectively be identified and quantified, by comparison with exposure information from a normal population. • All relevant accident and exposure data can be included: human-, vehicle-, and environmental related data for the pre-crash, crash and postcrash situation (the so-called Haddon matrix). The level of detail can be chosen depending on interest and/or budget, which makes the method very flexible. In this paper the accident collection and control group method are presented, including some of the achieved results from a pilot study on 30 truck accidents and 30 control locations. The data were analyzed by using cross-tabulations and classification-tree analysis. The method proved useful for the identification of statistically significant causational aspects.
The "Seven Steps Method" is an analysis and classification system, which describes the human participation factors and their causes in the temporal sequence (from the perceptibility to concrete action errors) taking into consideration the logical sequence of individual basic functions. By means of the "seven steps" it is possible to describe the relevant human causes of accidents from persons involved in the accident in an economic way with a sufficient degree of exactitude, because the causes can be further differentiated in their value (e.g. diversion as external diversion with regard to impact due to surroundings) and their sub values (e.g. external diversion with regard to impact due to surroundings in the shape of a "capture" of the perception by a prominent object of the traffic environment). Theoretically it is possible that one or more causing moments can be assigned to a person involved in an accident in each of the "seven steps"; however it is also possible to sufficiently clarify the cause in only one level (examples for this are described). In the practice of accident investigation at the site of the accident, the sequence chart is also relevant. With its assistance the questioning of the people involved in an accident can be accomplished in a structured way by assigning a set of questions to each step.
In recent years special attention has been paid to reducing the number of fatalities resulting from road traffic accidents. The ambitious target to cut in half the number of road users who are killed each year by 2010 compared with the 2001 figures, as set out in the European White Paper "European Transport Policy for 2010: Time to Decide" implies a general approach covering all kinds of road users. Much has been achieved, e.g. in relation to the safety of car passengers and pedestrians but PTW accidents still represent a significant proportion of fatal road accidents. More than 6,000 motorcyclists die annually on European roads which amounts to 16% of the EU-15 road fatalities. The European Commission therefore launched in 2004 a Sub- Project dealing with motorcycle accidents within an Integrated Project called APROSYS (Advanced PROtection SYStems) forming part of the 6th Framework Programme. In a first step, the combined national statistical data collections of Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Spain were analysed. Amongst other things parameters like accident location, road conditions, road alignment and injury severity have been explored. The main focus of the analysis was on serious and fatal motorcycle accidents and the results showed similar trends in all four countries. From these results 7 accident scenarios were selected for further investigation via such in-depth databases as the DEKRA database, the GIDAS 2002 database, the COST 327 database and the Dutch element of the MAIDS database. Three tasks, namely the study of PTW collisions with passenger cars, PTW accidents involving road infrastructure features, and motorcyclist protective devices have been assessed and these will concentrate inter alia on accident causes, rider kinematics and injury patterns. A detailed literature review together with the findings of the in-depths database analysis is presented in the paper. Conclusions are drawn and the further stages of the project are highlighted.
In Germany, in-depth accident investigations are carried out in the Hannover area since 1973. In 1999 a second region was added with surveys in Dresden and the surrounding area. Internationally, the acronym GIDAS (German In-Depth Accident Study) is commonly used for these surveys. Compared to many other countries, the sample sizes of the GIDAS surveys are much larger. The goal is to collect 1.000 accidents involving personal injuries per year and region. Data collection takes place by using a sampling procedure, which can be interpreted as a two-stage process with time intervals as primary units and accidents as secondary units. An important question is, to what extend these samples are representative for the target population from which they are drawn. Analyses show, for example, that accidents with persons killed or seriously injured are overrepresented in the samples compared to accidents with slightly injured persons. This means, that these data are subject to biases due to uncontrolled variation of sample inclusion probability. Therefore, appropriate weighting and expansion methods have to be applied in order to adjust or correct for these biases. The contribution describes the statistical and methodological principles underlying the GIDAS surveys with respect to sampling procedure, data collection and expansion. In addition, some suggestions regarding potential improvements of study design are made from a methodological point of view.
During the last 5 years, the number of cars fitted with side airbags has dramatically increased. They are now standard equipment, even on many smaller cars or less luxurious vehicles. While some side airbags offer thoracic protection alone, there are those that combine thoracic and head protection (of which most deploy from the seat). Other systems employ separate airbags for head and thorax protection, which are designed to be effective noticeably in a crash against a pole. This paper proposes an evaluation of the effectiveness of side airbags in preventing thoracic injuries to passenger car occupants involved in side crashes. First, the target population (who can take benefit of side airbag deployment and in what circumstances) is defined. Side airbags can be especially effective in cases of impacts on the door with intrusion at a certain impact speed. Then, an example case of a side impact with side airbag deployment is given were side airbag deployment is thought to have had a positive effect on injury outcome. A further case is presented where the impact configuration is likely to have reduced the effect of side airbag deployment on injury outcome. Finally, the estimation of side airbag effectiveness (in terms of additional occupant protection brought exclusively by the airbag) is proposed by comparing injury risk sustained by occupants in (more or less) similar cars (fitted or non fitted with airbags) because, during these years, car structure, and side airbag conception have considerably evolved. In-depth accident data from France, the UK and Germany has been collected. Out of 2,035 side impact accident cases available in the databases, we selected 435 occupants of passenger cars (built from 1998 onwards) involved in an injury accident between year 1998 and year 2004 for EES (Energy Equivalent Speed) values between 20km/h and 50km/h. The occupants, belted or not, were sat on the struck side, whatever the obstacle and type of accidents (intersection, loss of control, etc.). For multiple impact crashes, the side impact is assumed to be the more severe one. Passenger cars were fitted with (96) or without (339) side airbags. Most of the potential risk explanatory variables were correctly and reliably reported in the databases (velocity " impact zone " impact angle " occupant characteristics, etc.). The analysis compared injury risks for different levels of EES and different types of side airbags. A logistic regression model was also computed with injury variables (such as thoracic AIS 2+ or AIS 3+) as the dependant variable and other variables (including airbag type and EES) as explanatory injury risk factors. Results revealed statistically non-significant reductions in thoracic AIS 2+ and AIS 3+ injury risk in side airbag equipped cars in the impact violence range selected (odds ratio between 0.84 and 0.98 depending on types of airbags). The results are discussed. The non-significance is assumed to be due to a low number of cases. Statistical analysis for head injuries was not possible due to the low number of accident cases with passenger cars fitted with head airbags in the databases. Moreover, the discrepancies between the data coming from different countries (especially calculation of EES) might have introduced instability in the analysis.
The accident research project in Dresden was founded in July 1999. To date over 6.000 crash investigations have been undertaken. About 10.000 vehicles have been documented and over 13.000 participants have been debriefed. But there is much more than this scientific success. Because of the interdisciplinary character between the medical and technical focus, the project affords an important contribution for the education of the involved students. Over 200 students of different fields of study have got experiences not only for the occupational career. This lecture describes the additional effects of the accident research project regarding the education of the students, the capacity for teamwork and learning about dealing with accident casualties.
NASS: the glass is half full
(2007)
The National Accident Sampling System (NASS) was born in the late 1970s. It was based on a substantial amount of experience and analysis of what was needed in the United States to understand the safety challenges of our highways. This work also showed how to collect high quality and useful crash data efficiently. Unfortunately, when Ronald Reagan - a President who believed in limited government - was elected, any hope of full funding for NASS was lost. The concept of 75 teams investigating about 18,000 serious crashes in detail annually was never realized. The system got up to 50 teams, then was cut to 36, and finally to 24 teams investigating fewer than a quarter of the originally anticipated number of crashes per year. Despite this, the NASS investigations provide a rich source of data, collected according to a sophisticated statistical sampling system to facilitate detailed national estimates of road casualties on our nation- highways and their causes. In addition, changes have been made in recent years to increase the number of more serious crashes of recent model vehicles to make the results more relevant to improving vehicle safety. A recent, detailed examination of hundreds of rollovers has provided considerable insight into rollover casualties and into what can be done to reduce them. Some of these results will be presented that show the value of the NASS system. Our experience with NASS and the Fatal Accident Reporting System (FARS) suggests a number of improvements that could be made in the United States" crash data systems. It also provides justification for a doubling or tripling of our national expenditures on crash data collection.
Due to recent years accident avoidance and crashworthiness on Austrian roads were mostly developed on national statistics and on-scene investigation respectively. Identification and elimination of black spots were main targets. In fact many fatal accidents do not occur on such black spots and black-spot investigation has reached a limit. New methods are required and therefore the Austrian Road Safety Programme was introduced by the Austrian Ministry of Transport, Innovation and Technology. The primary objective is the reduction of fatalities and severe injuries. Graz University of Technology initiated the project ZEDATU (Zentrale Datenbank tödlicher Unfälle) with the goal to identify similarities in different accident configurations. A matrix was established which categorizes risk and key factors of participating parties. Based on this information countermeasures were worked out.
Since its beginning in 1999, the German In-Depth Accident Study (GIDAS) evolved into the presumably leading representative road traffic accident investigation in Europe, based on the work started in Hanover in 1973. The detailed and comprehensive description of traffic accidents forms an essential basis for vehicle safety research. Due to the ongoing extension of demands of researchers, there is a continuous progress in the techniques and systematic of accident investigation within GIDAS. This paper presents some of the most important developments over the last years. Primary vehicle safety systems are expected to have a significant and increasing influence on reducing accidents. GIDAS therefore began to include and collect active safety parameters as new variables from the year 2005 onwards. This will facilitate to assess the impact of present and future active safety measures. A new system to analyse causation factors of traffic accidents, called ACASS, was implemented in GIDAS in the year 2008. The whole process of data handling was optimised. Since 2005 the on-scene data acquisition is completely conducted with mobile tablet PCs. Comprehensive plausibility checks assure a high data quality. Multi-language codebooks are automatically generated from the database structure itself and interfaces ensure the connection to various database management systems. Members of the consortium can download database and codebook, and synchronize half a terabyte of photographic documentation through a secured online access. With the introduction of the AIS 2005 in the year 2006, some medical categorizations have been revised. To ensure the correct assignment of AIS codes to specific injuries an application based on a diagnostic dictionary was developed. Furthermore a coding tool for the AO classification was introduced. All these enhancements enable GIDAS to be up to date for future research questions.
The aim of this study is to investigate the differences in car occupant injury severity recorded in AIS 2005 compared to AIS 1990 and to outline the likely effects on future data analysis findings. Occupant injury data in the UK Cooperative Crash Injury Study Database (CCIS) were coded for the period February 2006 to November 2007 using both AIS 1990 and AIS 2005. Data for 1,994 occupants with over 6000 coded injuries were reviewed at the AIS and MAIS level of severities and body regions to determine changes between the two coding methodologies. Overall there was an apparent general trend for fewer injuries to be coded at the AIS 4+ severity and more injuries to be coded at the AIS 2 severity. When these injury trends were reviewed in more detail it was found that the body regions which contributed the most to these changes in severity were the head, thorax and extremities. This is one of the first studies to examine the implications for large databases when changing to an updated method for coding injuries.
Impact severity is a fundamental measure for all in-depth crash investigation projects. One methodology used in the UK is based on the US Calspan software package CRASH3. The UK- in-depth crash investigation studies routinely use AiDamage3 a software package which is based on an updated version of the original CRASH3 algorithm, including enhancements to the vehicle stiffness coefficients. Real world accident-damaged vehicles are measured and their crush is correlated with a library of stiffness coefficients. These measurements are then used, along with other parameters, to calculate the crash energy and equivalent changes of velocity of the vehicles (delta-v), which is a measure of the impact severity. UK in-depth accident studies routinely validate the crash severity methodologies applied as the vehicle fleet changes. This is achieved by analysing crash test data and using the appropriate residual crush damage and other inputs to AiDamage3 and checking the program- outputs with the known crash severity parameters. This procedure checks, at least in part, the default stiffness values in the data libraries and the reconstruction methods used.
Each year the traffic accident research teams in Dresden and Hanover provide an in-depth investigation of approximately two thousand accidents, aggregated in the GIDAS database. To accomplish a comprehensive review of each traffic accident recorded, a sensible and thorough encoding of suffered injuries is indispensable. The Abbreviated Injury Scale by AAAM offers a valuable and handy solution to achieve this goal. However, there were a few difficulties in the use of the AIS that came up in the past, which let to necessary improvements for the utilization of the AIS 2005 for GIDAS.
Nowadays, traffic accidents are recorded in historical databases. Regarding the huge quantity of data, the use of data mining tools is essential to help Experts, for automatically extracting relevant information in order to establish and quantify relations between severity and potential factors of accidents. An innovative approach is here proposed for an in depth investigation of real world accidents data base. Mutual information ratio based on conditional entropies is used to quantity the association strength between an accident outcome descriptor (injury severity) and other potential association factors. Information theoretic methods help to select automatically groups of factors mostly responsible of the severity of accident.
In the context of the COST357 research project, the climatic conditions and requirements for protective helmets for motorcyclists have been examined. The extent to which these factors would influence motorbike handling and accidents in which motorcyclists are involved have also been examined. This project addresses how cognitive abilities of motorcyclists relate to helmet construction factors. In particular, the aspects of motorcycle driver helmets are to be parameterized in order that they may be used subsequently as a basis for future requirement profiles. The task of one working group of the COST357 project has been to analyse accident events and to identify helmet design issues which affect motorcycle drivers while wearing a helmet. This has been achieved by collating accident data across different countries recorded in the course of in-depth investigations at the site of accidents and by combining this with field studies of motorcyclists participating in traffic, but not involved in accidents. This paper presents the study methodology, database and first results of this international survey. The basis of the study has been a total of 424 interviews of motorcyclists and 134 motorcycle accidents, which were collected across Germany, Greece, Italy, Ireland, Portugal and Turkey and combined in a single database.
A lack of representative European accident data to aid the development of safety policy, regulation and technological advancement is a major obstacle in the European Union. Data are needed to assess the performance of road and vehicle safety and is also needed to support the development of further actions by stakeholders. This short-paper describes the process of developing a data collection and analysis system designed to partly fill these gaps. A project team with members from 7 countries was set up to devise appropriate variable lists to collect fatal crash data under the following topic levels: accident, road environment, vehicle, and road user, using retrospective detailed police reports (n=1,300). The typical level of detail recorded was a minimum of 150 variables for each accident. The project will enable multidisciplinary information on the circumstances of fatal crashes to be interpreted to provide information on a range of causal factors and events surrounding the collisions.
The SafetyNet project was formulated in part to address the need for safety oriented European road accident data. One of the main tasks included within the project was the development of a methodology for better understanding of accident causation together with the development of an associated database involving data obtained from on-scene or "nearly onscene" accident investigations. Information from these investigations was complemented by data from follow-up interviews with crash participants to determine critical events and contributory factors to the accident occurrence. A method for classification of accident contributing factors, known as DREAM 3.0, was developed and tested in conjunction with the SafetyNet activities. Collection of data and case analysis for some 1 000 individual crashes have recently been completed and inserted into the database and therefore aggregation analyses of the data are now being undertaken. This paper describes the methodology development, an overview of the database and the initial aggregation analyses.
As the official German catalogue of accident causes has difficulty in matching the increasing demands for detailed psychologically relevant accident causation information, a new system, based on a "7 Steps" model, so called ACASS, for analyzing and collecting causation factors of traffic accidents, was implemented in GIDAS in the year 2008. A hierarchical system was developed, which describes the human causation factors in a chronological sequence (from the perception to concrete action errors), considering the logical sequence of basic human functions when reacting to a request for reaction. With the help of this system the human errors of accident participants can be adequately described, as the causes of each range of basic human functions may be divided into their characteristics (influence criteria) and further into specific indicators of these characteristics (e.g. distraction from inside the vehicle as a characteristic of an observation-error and the operation of devices as an indication for distraction from inside the vehicle. The causation factors accordingly classified can be recorded in an economic way as a number is assigned to each basic function, to each characteristic of that basic function and to each indicator of that characteristic. Thus each causation factor can be explicitly described by means of a code of numbers. In a similar way the causation factors based on the technology of the vehicle and the driving environment, which are also subdivided in an equally hierarchical system, can be tagged with a code. Since the causes of traffic accidents can consist of a variety of factors from different ranges and categories, it is possible to tag each accident participant with several causation factors. This also opens the possibility to not only assign causation factors to the accident causer in the sense of the law, but also to other participants involved in the accident, who may have contributed to the development of the accident. The hierarchical layout of the system and the collection of the causation factors with numerical codes allow for the possibility to code information on accident causes even if the causation factor is not known to its full extent or in full detail, given the possibility to code only those cause factors, which are known. Derived from the systematic of the analysis of human accident causes ("7 steps") and from the practical experiences of on-scene interviews of accident participants, a system was set in place, which offers the possibility to extensively record not only human causation factors in a structured form. Furthermore, the analysis of the human causation factors in such a structured way provides a tool, especially for on-scene accident investigations, to conduct the interview of accident participants effectively and in a structured way.
While many medical studies have dealt with the incidence, nature and treatment of polytrauma the injury-causing accident mechanisms are rarely discussed in detail, mostly due to the lack of documentation of the technical aspects. The present prospective study was started in late 2007 and collects data from traffic accidents with most severely injured in six south- German counties and two larger cities for the duration of one year. It is aimed at identifying and documenting all polytrauma cases (ISS ≥ 16) caused by traffic accidents and their crash circumstances. The data collection is based on an interdisciplinary concept to include both the police, emergency dispatch centers, hospitals and fire departments in the region and is completely anonymous. Potentially relevant cases where an emergency physician was called to the scene of a traffic accident are provided by the dispatch center. All three hospitals in the region suited for the treatment of polytraumatised patients record injuries, major diagnostic and surgery data. Data and images from the accident scene are provided by the police and by fire departments. The latter provide information which is usually not available from the police, like deployed airbags, vehicle extrication measures and detailed views of car interiors. The main objective of the study is to determine the structure of road users who sustain a polytrauma, their crash opponents and the injury patterns found in relation to the collision configuration and the protection by seat belts, air bags and other devices. With detailed documentation of vehicle damage and extrication measures the study is also intended to support the development of injury predictors for pre-hospital treatment and provide field data regarding further improvement of technical rescue.
The Centre for Automotive Safety Research (formerly the Road Accident Research Unit) at the University of Adelaide in South Australia has a history of in-depth crash investigation going back to the 1970s. In recent years, our focus has been on studying factors that contribute to road crashes, with an emphasis on the role of road infrastructure. Our method involves crash notification by the South Australian Ambulance Service and detailed investigation of the crash scene usually before the crash-involved vehicles have been moved. This at-scene data collection is supplemented with police crash reports, Coroner- reports including autopsy findings for fatal crashes, case notes from hospitals for all injured persons, structured interviews with crash participants and witnesses, and computerised reconstruction of the events of the crash. One of the most notable research findings to emerge from our in-depth work has been the relationship between travelling speed and the risk of crash involvement. By comparing the calculated free speeds of crash-involved vehicles (cases) with the measured speeds of non-crash-involved vehicles travelling on the same roads at the same time of day (controls), we were able to establish that an exponential relationship exists between travelling speed and the likelihood of involvement in a casualty crash. This was the case for both metropolitan and rural areas. This research prompted the reduction of some speed limits in Australia, which has resulted in notable decreases in crash numbers. Another finding of interest in our recent investigation of 298 mostly daytime crashes in metropolitan Adelaide was that medical conditions make a sizeable contribution to the occurrence of road crashes. We found that almost half of the drivers, riders and pedestrians involved in the collisions had at least one pre-existing medical condition, and half of these individuals had two or more such conditions. We found that a medical condition was the direct causal factor in 13% of the casualty crashes investigated and accounted for 23% of all hospital admission or fatal crash outcomes. A follow-up study of all hospital admissions for road crashes in Adelaide is now going ahead to look further at this problem. The paper also describes studies looking specifically at pedestrian crashes. These include studies of the relationship between travelling speed and the risk of a fatal pedestrian crash, and studies utilising real crash data to validate headforms and test dummies used in the assessment of the safety of new vehicles in the event of a collision with a pedestrian.
Pedestrian accidents are one of the major concerns related with road accidents around the world. Portugal has one of the highest rates of pedestrian fatalities in Europe. In this paper an overview conditions were the pedestrian accidents occurred in Portugal is presented. In the last years, a project related with the pedestrian accidents has run in Portugal for the period 2004-2006 where 603 people died, 2097 have been severely injured and about 17000 slightly injured. Within this project all the pedestrian accidents in this period have been analysed providing global information about a wide range of aspects, since location, driver and pedestrian characteristics, weather and road conditions, among others. In addition, 50 in-depth accidents have been investigated and the data collected according the Pendant methodology. For this in-depth methodology detailed information about the accident has been collected, including injuries, vehicle damage, road conditions and road user- behaviour and actions. An accident reconstruction has been carried for each case including the determination of the speeds and driver actions, and the analysis of the contributing factors for the accident. Depending of the accident complexity, different methodologies have been used to analyse these accident, from the classical analytical equations such as Simms and Woods, to the use of detailed computational pedestrian models as those included in the commercial software- PC-Crash-® or Madymo-®. Also one of the goals of our investigation is the development of multibody models and methodologies for the reconstruction of pedestrian accidents. Some of these tools integrated in the commercial software Cosmos Motion-® are presented. The advantages of the different approaches are compared and discussed for some of the accidents investigated. With these tools the impact speed can be determined from the projection distance with analytical tools or PC-Crash-®, but more complex tools should be used to determine speed from the injuries, what is especially important for fatal accidents. The influence of the vehicle geometry and stiffness characteristics is another aspect analysed, where the influence of the vehicle stiffness has been determined using a combined multibody-finite elements approach within the software Madymo-®.
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.
In an on-going project since 2005, ADAC has been analyzing accidents documented by the ADAC air rescue service. The knowledge derived from real-life accidents serves as a basis for new test configurations and assessment criteria. In 2007, ADAC began looking into the feasibility of international data collection. The idea of Global Accident Prevention was born. Three European partner clubs have begun pioneering the project (ÖAMTC, ANWB, and RACC). The aim is to set up an international accident research network to provide a steady stream of information on road accidents. The FIA Foundation supports ADAC in developing and coordinating this initiative.
Den bisherigen Richtlinien zu Verkehrserhebungen ist gemeinsam, dass sie - wenn überhaupt - nur sehr wenige Aussagen zur erreichbaren Datenqualität enthalten. Normative Vorgaben und konkrete Handlungsanweisungen, die zu einer Verbesserung der Datenqualität von Erhebungen führen, fehlen in der Regel für die meisten Erhebungsverfahren. Abgesehen von Einzelaspekten wie beispielsweise den Kernelementen für Haushaltsbefragungen zum Verkehrsverhalten gibt es keine Qualitätsstandards für die Konzipierung, Durchführung und Auswertung einer Verkehrserhebung. Ziel der vorliegenden Studie ist es, mit Blick auf verschiedene Datennutzer und Arten der Datenverwendung wissenschaftlich abgesicherte Qualitätsstandards für Verkehrserhebungen zu erarbeiten. Im Kern sollten Hinweise gegeben werden, durch welche konkreten methodischen Ansätze und praktische Maßnahmen man für die unterschiedlichen Erhebungsverfahren im Verkehrswesen (Zählungen, Messungen, Verhaltensbeobachtungen und Befragungen) die jeweils bestmögliche Datenqualität erreichen kann. Die Ergebnisse dieses Projektes sollen darüber hinaus auch als eine Grundlage für die Fortschreibung der neuen "Empfehlungen für Verkehrserhebungen (EVE)" dienen. Im Kapitel 2 wird zur Schaffung eines geeigneten theoretischen Rahmens nach einer allgemeinen, an den Ansätzen des Qualitätsmanagements orientierten Definition von Datenqualität zunächst ein umfassendes Datenqualitätskonzept dargestellt, welches im Bereich der amtlichen Statistik auf europäischer Ebene entwickelt worden ist. Kapitel 3 stellt wichtige verkehrswissenschaftliche Grundlagen der vorliegenden Untersuchung zusammen. Ausgangspunkt ist eine allgemeine Charakterisierung von Verkehrserhebungen. In Kapitel 4 wird der konzeptuelle Rahmen für die Ermittlung von Standards der Datenqualität dargestellt. Hierzu werden allgemeine Indikatoren der Datenqualität auf Verkehrserhebungen übertragen. Anschließend werden die verschiedenen Anspruchsgruppen und deren Anforderungen an die Datenqualität betrachtet und darauf aufbauend die Elemente einer Qualitätsstrategie für Verkehrserhebungen entwickelt. Wie eine angemessene Datenqualität bei den verschiedenen Arten von Verkehrserhebungen erreicht werden kann, wird in den Kapiteln 5 bis 8 dargestellt. Hier werden Hinweise und Empfehlungen zum Stichprobenverfahren gegeben und es wird aufgezeigt, wie systematische Fehler (Nichterfassung von Stichprobeneinheiten, Fehler bei der Erfassung von Merkmalen, bei der Datenaufbereitung und -auswertung sowie der Darstellung von Ergebnissen) vermieden oder zumindest reduziert werden können. Abschließend werden in Kapitel 9 die wesentlichen Erkenntnisse zusammengefasst und ein Dokumentationsschema vorgestellt, welches einen Orientierungsrahmen für die Durchführung von Verkehrserhebungen liefert.
In India, heavy truck crashes on national highways account for a number of fatalities. But due to lack of in-depth crash data, detailed analysis is not possible to determine injury mechanisms, and to identify infrastructure, vehicle and human factors affecting these crashes. Over the past two years, researchers in India have established a crash investigation network, with the co-operation of the police and hospitals, to conduct crash investigations and in-depth crash data collection on national highways in the state of Tamil Nadu. This pioneering effort has resulted in the development of a heavy truck crash investigation methodology, the outcome of which is scientific and reliable crash data that has been able to provide good insight into truck crashes and their causes. This paper explains the need for truck crash investigations, the methodology, conclusions of the data analyzed up to date, and the need to focus on truck driver working conditions.
Unfortunately, there has been a high number of accident fatalities reported in the Czech Republic in recent years. There are many causes which have led to a growth in the number of road traffic accidents. Since 1990, traffic density has demonstrated an upward moving tendency, daily traffic-jams are on the increase in many cities and traffic capacity on roads and streets is not able to satisfy this increasing density. Moreover, many road users lack experience in terms of driving modern cars. The National Accident Study of the Czech Republic is based on the assumption that the year 2010 is considered as a pilot project with the testing operation of collecting and evaluating data from traffic accidents. From the beginning of 2011, a fully-functional structure of the Traffic Accident Research will be created and solid data generated. Based on this assumption, we hope to begin meaningful cooperation with foreign countries.
A national initiative from the vehicle manufacturers, safety system suppliers, the road administration and universities in Sweden took off in 2007. The aim was to develop a national investigation network and a methodology focusing on all phases of a crash (pre-crash, in-crash and post-crash) as well as all parts of the road transport system (road user, vehicle and road environment). The initiative is formally run as a project with the acronym INTACT (Investigation Network and Accident Collection Techniques). It was a three year pilot with the aim to develop methodologies for an extended national crash investigation activity. During the first year the INTACT partners agreed on the aim for the investigation and methods for retrieving the data were developed. During the second and third year the methodology was tested in real-world investigations and further refinement was made. The paper describes the methodology developed to obtain high qualitative in-depth road crash data.
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.
Accidents with vulnerable road users require special attention within the road safety work because these accidents are often accompanied with severe injuries. Thus In 2006 at least 6200 Powered Two Wheeler (PTW) riders were killed in road crashes in the EU 25 representing 16% of the total number of road deaths while accounting for only 2% of the total kilometers driven. For the prevention of accidents with VRU above all the knowledge of the causes of the accidents is of special importance. This study is based on the methodology of the German In-Depth Accident Study GIDAS. Within GIDAS extensive data on various fields of accidentology are collected on-scene from road traffic accidents with injuries in the Hannover and Dresden area. Using a well defined sample plan the collected data is highly representative to the whole German situation (Brühning et al, Otte et al). The need of in-depth accident causation data in accident research led to the development of a special tool for the collection of such data called ACASS (Accident Causation Analysis with Seven Steps), which was implemented in the GIDAS methodology in 2008 and described by Otte in 2009.
Causation patterns and data collection blind spots for fatal intersection accidents in Norway
(2010)
Norwegian fatal intersection accidents from the years 2005-2007 were analysed to identify any causation patterns among their underlying contributing factors, and also to evaluate whether the data collection and documentation procedures used by the Norwegian in-depth investigation teams produces the information necessary to perform causation pattern analysis. A total of 28 fatal accidents were analysed. Details on crash contributing factors for each driver in each crash were first coded using the Driving Reliability and Error Analysis Method (DREAM), and then aggregated based on whether the driver was going straight or turning. Analysis results indicate that turning drivers to a large extent are faced with perception difficulties and unexpected behaviour from the primary conflict vehicle, while at the same time trying to negotiate a demanding traffic situation. Drivers going straight on the other hand have less perception difficulties. Instead, their main problem is that they largely expect turning drivers to yield. When this assumption is violated, they are either slow to react or do not react at all. Contributing factors often pointed to in literature, e.g. high speed, drugs and/or alcohol and inadequate driver training, played a role in 12 of 28 accidents. While this confirms their prevalence, it also indicates that most drivers end up in these situations due to combinations of less auspicious contributing factors. In terms of data collection and documentation, information on blunt end factors (those more distant in time/space, yet important for the development of events) was more limited than information on sharp end factors (those close in time/space to the crash). A possible explanation is that analysts may view some blunt end factors as event circumstances rather than contributing factors in themselves, and therefore do not report them. There was also an asymmetry in terms of reported obstructions to view due to signposts and vegetation. While frequently reported as contributing for turning drivers, they were rarely reported as contributing for their counterparts in the same accidents. This probably reflects an involuntary focus of the analyst on identifying contributing factors for the driver legally held liable, while less attention is paid to the driver judged not at fault. Since who to blame often is irrelevant from a countermeasure development point of view, this underlying investigator mindset needs addressing to avoid future bias in crash investigation reports.
The NHTSA-sponsored Crash Injury Research and Engineering Network (CIREN) has collected and analyzed crash, vehicle damage, and detailed injury data from over 4000 case occupants who were patients admitted to Level-I trauma centers following involvement in motor vehicle crashes. Since 2005, CIREN has used a methodology known as "BioTab" to analyze and document the causes of injuries resulting from passenger vehicle crashes. BioTab was developed to provide a complete evidenced-based method to describe and document injury causation from in-depth crash investigations with confidence levels assigned to the causes of injury based on the available evidence. This paper describes how the BioTab method is being used in CIREN to leverage the data collected from in-depth crash investigations, and particularly the detailed injury data available in CIREN, to develop evidence-based assessments of injury causation. CIREN case examples are provided to demonstrate the ability of the BioTab method to improve real-world crash/injury data assessment.
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.
Für den in den vergangenen Jahren stark wachsenden Radwegebestand sollten die weitgehend noch fehlenden Verfahrensgrundlagen einer systematischen baulichen Erhaltung erarbeitet werden. Untersuchungsgegenstand waren dabei Radwege mit Asphalt-, Beton- und Pflasterdecken sowie wassergebundenen Decken in Baulast des Bundes. Die Ziele der baulichen Erhaltung bestehen bei den Radwegen ähnlich wie bei Fahrbahnen in der Gewährleistung einer angemessenen Verkehrssicherheit und Befahrbarkeit sowie in einer rechtzeitigen wirtschaftlichen Substanzerhaltung. Als Zustandsmerkmale zur umfassenden Beschreibung der für die Zielkriterien relevanten Schäden und Mängeldienen die vertikalen Schwingbeschleunigungen (Effektivwert in m/s-² pro m) oder die Höhenlängsprofile (pro cm) zur Kennzeichnung der Längsebenheit sowie Risse und sonstige Oberflächenschäden zur Beschreibung des Substanzzustands. Die Substanzmerkmale werden ebenso wie konstruktiv bedingte Mängel (überstehende/abgesackte Einbauten, Bordsteine, Wurzelhebungen) im 1-m-Raster ausgewertet. Das für die Zustandserfassung auf Basis vorliegender in- und ausländischer Erfahrungen entwickelte Messfahrrad ermöglicht mit Elektrounterstützung (Pedelec) eine weitgehend konstante Fahrtgeschwindigkeit von 25 km/h und eine Tagesbefahrungsleistung ≥ 50 km. Aufgezeichnet werden digitale Videos, GPS-Tracks, die vertikale Schwingbeschleunigung (mit Beschleunigungsaufnehmer) und Tonsignale für besondere Markierungen. Bei der Zustandsbewertung werden die für homogene Auswerteabschnitte ermittelten dimensionsbehafteten Zustandsgrößen in dimensionslose Zustandswerte (Noten von 1 bis 5) überführt, um eine Verknüpfung unterschiedlicher Merkmale zum Gebrauchs- und Substanzwert zu ermöglichen. Der Gebrauchswert, der für die Zielkriterien Sicherheit und Befahrbarkeit steht, entspricht bei Radwegen dem Zustandswert der vertikalen Schwingbeschleunigung. Beim Substanzwert werden vereinfachend nur die Risse mit den zusammengefassten restlichen Schäden ("Restschadensfläche") verknüpft. Die mitgeführten Informationen zu den konstruktiv bedingten Mängeln dienen nur zur Steuerung des Erhaltungsgeschehens. Für die Erhaltungsplanung werden zusätzlich zu den Ergebnissen der Zustandserfassung/-bewertung und den Netzkenngrößen mindestens noch die Radwegbreiten, die Deckschichtarten sowie grobe Angaben zum Befestigungsaufbau (standardisiert/nicht standardisiert) und zum Deckenalter benötigt. Derzeit müssen die Daten im Regelfall in einer lokalen Datei für die Erhaltungsplanung vorgehalten werden, die bezüglich der Netzdaten häufig mit der jeweiligen Straßendatenbank abgestimmt werden sollte. Aus den homogenen Auswerteabschnitten dieser Datei werden längere Erhaltungsabschnitte gebildet. Danach können Bereiche ausgesondert werden, für die punktuelle/kleinflächige Maßnahmen der baulichen Unterhaltung zur Beseitigung örtlicher Schäden bzw. konstruktiv bedingter Mängel oder auch Sondermaßnahmen(z. B. bei Wurzelhebungen) zweckmäßig sind. Der Bedarf an Instandsetzungen und Erneuerungen kann auf Basis von Mängelklassen, die ab Zustandswerten von 3,5 (Warnwert) mit Hilfe von Bestands- und Zustandskonstellationen abgrenzbar sind, in ein erstes einfaches, nach Dringlichkeiten sortiertes Erhaltungsprogramm überführt werden. Zuvor kann eine Zustandsfortschreibung mit pragmatisch festgelegten Verlaufsfunktionen erfolgen. Die Kostenwerte für die Instandsetzungs- und Erneuerungsmaßnahmearten für Radwege sind derzeit noch in Analogie zur Fahrbahnerhaltung abgeschätzt. Die ausgearbeiteten Verfahren zur Bewertung der Maßnahmenutzen und zur netzweiten Optimierung von Maßnahmealternativen sind auch für kleine Radwegenetze letztlich nur mit einem IT-Verfahren ("PMS-Radwege") umsetzbar. Im Projektablauf waren vielfach zeitintensive grundlegende Analysen erforderlich. Es ist jedoch gelungen, ein Verfahren zu entwickeln und durch Tests zur Anwendungsreife zu bringen, das auf dem naheliegenden Fahrzeug für die Zustandserfassung von Radwegen, dem Fahrrad, basiert. Auch aufgrund einer sehr eingeschränkten Verwendbarkeit von Daten aus vorliegenden netzweiten Erfassungen sind zur Überprüfung und Verifizierung der entwickelten Verfahren insbesondere zur Erfassung und Auswertung der vertikalen Schwingbeschleunigung wie auch zur Erhaltungsplanung weitere Untersuchungen und Sensitivitätsanalysen erforderlich.
Der Bericht enthält die Beurteilung von schädigungsrelevanten Einwirkungen und Schädigungspotenzialen von Betonbrücken sowie deren Erfassung am Bauteil mithilfe aussagekräftiger Parameter und geeigneter Sensoren im Rahmen des Themenschwerpunkts "Intelligente Bauwerke" der BASt. Die Grundlage zur Beurteilung von Schädigungspotenzialen bildet die Auswertung tatsächlich aufgetretener Schäden an Stahlbeton- und Spannbetonbrücken (97.662 Schäden an 3.474 Brücken). Neben der Aufbereitung der chronologischen Entwicklung von Vorschriften und Normen für den Bau von Brücken wurden Schäden infolge von Planungs- und Entwurfsfehlern, sowie Ausführungsfehlern analysiert. Den Schwerpunkt des Berichts bilden die Darstellung und Bewertung von Schädigungspotenzialen getrennt für die Widerstandsseite(auffällige Bauteile/Konstruktionen) sowie für die Einwirkungsseite (relevante Einwirkungen). Bauteile und Konstruktionen werden dazu im Hinblick auf die Merkmale Standsicherheit, Dauerhaftigkeit und Verkehrssicherheit untersucht. Darüber hinaus werden maßgebende Einwirkungen aus den Umweltbedingungen und insbesondere die Einwirkungen infolge des (Schwer-)Verkehrs bewertet. In einem weiteren Arbeitsschritt werden geeignete Schädigungsmodelle zur Beschreibung bekannter Schädigungsprozesse bei Brücken aus Stahl- und Spannbeton dargestellt und die modellspezifischen Einflussgrößen detailliert aufbereitet. Die Darstellung relevanter Parameter zur Erfassung von Einwirkungen und Schäden an Brückenbauwerken, sowie die Erfassung dieser Parameter mit geeigneten Sensoren bilden einen weiteren Schwerpunkt des Projektes. Darüber hinaus werden die Grundlagen eines Datenerfassungssystems dargestellt und abschließend Genauigkeits- und Häufigkeitsbereiche für die Datenerfassung und die Möglichkeiten der Sensorplatzierung aufgezeigt. Die Zusammenstellung der Ergebnisse erfolgt in Form eines Handbuchs.
Standortkataster für Lärmschutzanlagen mit Ertragsprognose für potenzielle Photovoltaik-Anwendungen
(2015)
Lärmschutzwände an bundesdeutschen Fernverkehrsstraßen bieten ein beachtliches Energiepotenzial. In welchem Umfang war bisher nicht ausreichend untersucht. Es fehlen bisher jedoch Untersuchungen darüber, welcher Anteil dieser Anlagen für eine Photovoltaik-Nutzung geeignet ist. Auch fehlen die geeigneten Werkzeuge und Datengrundlagen, um die Eignung im Einzelfall und in der statistischen Übersicht zu analysieren und zu bewerten. Die Ergebnisse dieses Forschungsvorhabens liefern einen Beitrag, diese Lücken zu schließen. Mit diesem Forschungsvorhaben wurde zum ersten Mal ein für die BRD flächendeckendes Kataster der Lärmschutzeinrichtungen erstellt. Auf Grundlage des zu erstellenden Katasters von Lärmschutzeinrichtungen und sonstigen Barrieren an Straßen (Seiten- und Mittelbarrieren) wurden zudem Verfahren entwickelt, die die Standorteignung von Lärmschutzanlagen für Photovoltaikanlagen ermittelt. Die erfassten Informationen wurden in einem "Geografischen Informationssystem" (GIS) zusammengeführt, das nun der Fachabteilung als Arbeitsgrundlage dienen kann. Das entwickelte geografische Informationssystem beinhaltet Berechnungswerkzeuge, die es erlauben, Potenzialanalysen des Photovoltaikertrags an jedem Punkt des Straßenraums für Bundesfernstraßen durchzuführen. Dabei ist es möglich, Ertragsberechnungen sowohl für bestehende Lärmschutzeinrichtungen als auch für neue Standorte für die Zwecke der Ausbauplanung durchzuführen. Damit wird die Grundlage geschaffen, die private Investorenbeteiligung zu forcieren. Die Ergebnisse wurden so aufbereitet und zur Verfügung gestellt, dass ein Import der Ergebnisse in das "Bundesinformationssystem Straße" (BISStra) problemlos möglich ist. Die Ergebnisse des Forschungsvorhabens liefern entscheidende Grundlagen zur Beurteilung der multifunktionalen Nutzung von Lärmschutzanlagen und Barrieren im Straßennebenraum. Damit wird die Grundlage für weitere Planungen geschaffen. Bei Neuanlagen kann bereits in der Planungsphase die Photovoltaik-Eignung bewertet werden. Mit den erfassten Wildbarrieren besteht nun eine Datengrundlage, die es nachfolgenden Arbeiten erlaubt, den Bedarf für besondere Schutzmaßnahmen zur Verbesserung der Verkehrssicherheit und auch zum Schutz gefährdeter Arten oder Populationen abzuleiten.
While it is important to track trends in the number of road accidents in different countries using national statistics, there is a need for data with more detailed information, so called in-depth accident data. For this reason, several accident data projects emerged worldwide in recent years. However, also different data standards were established and so comparative analysis of international in-depth data has been very hard to conduct, so far. This is why the project iGLAD (Initiative for the Global Harmonization of Accident Data) was established and created the prerequisites for building up a standardized dataset out of the common denominator of different in-depth accident databases from Europe, USA and Asia. In the first phase, the project received funding from ACEA to compile an initial database. To accomplish this, a suitable data scheme has been defined, a pilot study has been conducted as proof of concept and the recoding of the first common data base has been initiated. Also, to prepare the project for its self-supporting continuation in the next years, a business model has been developed. This paper reports the history and status of the project, the current challenges and the creation of a capable consortium to maintain the data. In mid-2014, the initial database containing 1550 cases from 10 different countries will be completed and a first detailed view on this data will be possible.
The changed focus in vehicle safety technology from secondary to primary safety systems need to evolve new methods to investigate accidents, high critical, critical and normal driving situations. Current Naturalistic Driving Studies mostly use vehicles that are highly equipped with additional measuring devices, video cameras, recording technology, and sensors. These equipped fleets are very expensive regarding the setup and administration of the study. Due to the great rarity of crashes it is additionally necessary to have a high distribution and a homogeneous distribution of subject groups. At the end all these facts are leading to a very expensive study with a manageable number of data. Smartphones are becoming more and more popular not only for younger people. Contrary to traditional mobile phones they are mostly equipped with sensors for acceleration and yaw rates, GPS modules as well as cameras in high definition resolution. Additionally they have high-performance processors that enable the execution of CPU-intensive tools directly on the phone. The wide distribution of these smartphones enables researchers to get high numbers of users for such studies. The paper shows and demonstrates a software app for smartphones that is able to record different driving situations up to crashes. Therefore all relevant parameter from the sensors, camera and GPS device are saved for a given duration if the event was triggered. The complete configuration is independently adjustable to the relevant driver and all events were sent automatically to the research institute for a further process. Direct after the event, interviews with the driver can be done and important data regarding the event itself are documented. The presentation shows the methodology and gives a demonstration of the working progress as well as first results and examples of the current study. In the discussion the advantages of this method will be discussed and compared with the disadvantages. The paper shows an alternative method to investigate real accident and incident data. This method is thereby highly cost efficient and comparable with existing methods for benefit estimation.
Although the annual traffic accident statistics published by the national police is available in public, the detailed traffic accident data has not been released in Korea. Recently the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport recognized the importance of in-depth accident data to enhance road traffic safety and initiated a research project to establish a collection of the detailed accident data. The main objective of the project is a feasibility study to establish KIDAS (Korea In-Depth Accident Study). Within this project, three university hospitals which are located in mid-size cities have been selected to collect accident data. Annually, more than 500 cases of accidents have been collected from the in-patient's interviews and diagnosis. Unlike GIDAS (German In-Depth Accident Study), currently on-site investigation can"t be performed by the Korean police. The only available data is patient medical records, patient's description of accident circumstances and the damaged vehicle. Occasionally the police provide the accident investigation reports containing very brief information on accident causation and vehicle safety. In a first step, the concept of KIDAS is to adopt the format of iGLAD (Initiative for the Global Harmonization of Accident Data) for harmonization. Since the currently collected accident information is extremely limited compared with GIDAS, the other sources of data and calculations such as KNCAP vehicle data, pc-crash simulations, vehicle registration information, insurance company data are utilized to complete the iGLAD template. Results from KIDAS_iGLAD and the cases of assessment of active safety devices such as AEBS, ESC, and LDWS will be evaluated.
Die Dichte des Netzes an Glättemeldeanlagen (GMA) an Bundesautobahnen ist wesentlich höher als im nachgeordneten Netz. Eine Verdichtung des Messstellennetzes analog zu Bundesautobahnen ist jedoch aus finanziellen und organisatorischen Gründen nicht realisierbar. Ziel der Forschungsvorhaben ist daher die vereinfachte Erfassung von winterlichen Fahrbahn- und Witterungszuständen, um eine wesentliche Verdichtung des Messstellennetzes unter wirtschaftlich akzeptablen Bedingungen zu ermöglichen. Hierdurch soll den Winterdienstverantwortlichen eine netzweite Beurteilung des Streckenzustandes ermöglicht werden, um die Winterdiensteinsätze anforderungsgerechter und wirtschaftlicher durchführen zu können. Im Rahmen einer Lebenszykluskostenanalyse wurden Investitions- und Betriebskostendaten von über 200 GMA ausgewertet. Die Analyse ergab durchschnittliche Investitionskosten von 38.300 € je Messstelle. Diese Kosten werden hauptsächlich durch die Art der Stromversorgung (netzgebunden/autark) sowie den Umfang und die Art der Sensorik beeinflusst. Die bei Energieverbrauchsmessungen an bestehenden GMA erfassten Daten zeigen, dass GMA teils stark unterschiedliche Leistungsverbräuche besitzen, eine energieoptimierte Ausstattung jedoch eine wirtschaftlich akzeptable autarke Energieversorgung ermöglicht. Im Winter 2011/2012 wurden in drei Meistereien Einsatzentscheidungen untersucht. GMA sind hierbei die wichtigste Informationsquelle; sie werden in über 60 % aller Entscheidungen herangezogen. Luft- und Fahrbahnoberflächentemperatur sind die wichtigsten Parameter. Große Bedeutung für die Nutzer hat vielfach auch ein Kamerabild. Wesentlich für einen wirtschaftlichen Betrieb von GMA und einen gleichbleibenden Nutzen für die Anwender ist eine hohe Zuverlässigkeit in die angezeigten Messdaten. Daher sollte die Qualitätssicherung bei Installation und laufendem Betrieb größere Bedeutung gewinnen, indem durch die Straßenbauverwaltungen neben der regelmäßigen Wartung und Kalibrierung standardisierte Abnahme- und regelmäßige Kontrollprüfungen auf Grundlage der geltenden technischen Normen vorgesehen werden.
Unter dem Begriff "Intelligente Brücke" erfolgt in einem Forschungscluster der Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen die Entwicklung eines adaptiven Systems zur kontinuierlichen Bereitstellung relevanter Informationen für eine ganzheitliche Zustandsbewertung durch den Einsatz von geeigneter Sensorik in Verbindung mit Analyse- und Bewertungsverfahren. Hierdurch werden online Hinweise auf zu erwartende Schädigungen und Zustandsänderungen ermöglicht. Im Rahmen des digitalen Testfelds Autobahn werden ausgewählte Entwicklungen "Einwirkungsüberwachung", "Instrumentierte Fahrbahnübergänge und Lager" sowie "Sensornetze" an einer Spannbetonbrücke im Autobahnkreuz Nürnberg umfänglich vorgestellt und damit bundesweit zugänglich gemacht. Das Gesamtsystem besteht aus den Komponenten eines Informationssystems zur Analyse und Bewertung von Messdaten instrumentierter Bauteile. Die dabei durchzuführenden Untersuchungen beziehen sich auf die fortlaufende Aktualisierung des objektbezogenen Lastmodells und Analysen zur Restlebensdauer der Brücke sowie der untersuchten Bauteile. Die erfassten und aufbereiteten Informationen werden der zuständigen Straßenbauverwaltung online zur Verfügung gestellt. Das System wird im Rahmen eines fünfjährigen Untersuchungsprogramms betrieben, analysiert und weiterentwickelt.
In der Delegierten Verordnung (EU) 2015/962 (Europäische Kommission, 2015) wird von den Mitgliedsstaaten neben der Einrichtung nationaler Zugangspunkte zu Straßen- und Verkehrsdaten auch die gemeinsame Definition von Datenqualitätsindikatoren und Methoden zur Qualitätsbewertung und -kontrolle der verschiedenen Datenarten gefordert. Ziel dieses Projektes war es daher, ein Qualitätsmanagementsystems (QMS) für die Erfassung und Weiterverarbeitung von Daten für IVS-Dienste zu entwickeln und für die Datenarten Baustelleninformationen und Reisezeitinformationen zu spezifizieren. Dazu wurden - der Stand der Wissenschaft und Technik recherchiert, - Kriterien, Kenngrößen und Verfahren zur Messung der Qualität von Baustellen- und Reisezeitinformationen definiert, - ein organisatorischer Rahmen für ein Qualitätsmanagement erstellt, - ein Prozess zur Zertifizierung von bei Organisationen (i. d. R. Datengebern) eingeführten QMS entwickelt und - ein Leitfaden erstellt, der die Organisationen bei der Einführung und Anwendung eines QMS helfen soll. Durch die Einführung, Anwendung und regelmäßige Prüfung des im Rahmen dieses Projektes entwickelten und im zugehörigen Leitfaden beschriebenen QMS kann seitens der Datengeber ein Großteil der im Rahmen des Projektes identifizierten Probleme erkannt und behoben werden. Wesentliche Maßnahmen sind dabei, - die eindeutige Übertragung der Verantwortung für die Qualität der bereitgestellten Informationen auf die Datengeber, - die Bereitstellung (Finanzierung), regelmäßige Schulung und Motivation von zuständigem Personal mit ausreichendem Zeitbudget, - die bereits begonnene Überarbeitung der DATEX- II-Profile, - die Bereitstellung DATEX-II-Profilkonformer Systeme zur Eingabe und Übertragung der Meldungen und - die Lieferung von Qualitätskenngrößen mit den Informationen.
Das vorliegende Forschungsprojekt (FE 89.0288/2013) hatte zur Aufgabe, die Eignung verschiedener Systeme zur flächendeckenden Verdichtungskontrolle beim Einbau von Schichten in Asphaltbauweise zu untersuchen. Auf einer Versuchsstrecke zwischen Pirmasens und Landau wurden hierzu insgesamt 5 Testfelder mit einer Länge von jeweils 1 km angelegt und unter Anwendung herstellerspezifischer Kontrollsysteme verdichtet. Ein Feld diente dabei als Referenz, in dem keine flächendeckende Verdichtungskontrolle vollzogen wurde. Alle zur Beurteilung des Verdichtungserfolgs notwendigen Randparameter wurden kontinuierlich aufgezeichnet und anschließend ausgewertet. Hierzu zählten beispielsweise die Temperatur des Mischguts und der Luft, aber auch die durch Kameraaufnahmen dokumentierten tatsächlichen Walzüberfahrten in jedem Abschnitt. Zusätzlich wurden im Nachgang umfangreiche Kontrollprüfungen und Druck-Schwellversuche zur Bewertung der erreichten Verdichtung durchgeführt. Zusammenfassend lassen sich aus den Ergebnissen des Forschungsprojekts folgende Erkenntnisse gewinnen: - Zwischen dem Referenzfeld und den Feldern mit flächendeckender Verdichtungskontrolle konnten keine gravierenden Abweichungen der erreichten Verdichtungsgrade festgestellt werden. - Die Streuungen der Verdichtungsgrade in den jeweiligen Testfeldern weisen keine signifikanten Unterschiede auf. Die erreichten Verdichtungsgrade werden bei Verwendung von Verdichtungskontrollsystemen mit weniger Walzübergangszahlen erreicht. - Bei Verwendung von Verdichtungskontrollsystemen stellen sich eine homogenere Verteilung von Walzübergängen und damit eine gleichmäßigere Flächenverdichtung ein. Insgesamt konnte dem Einsatz von Systemen zur flächendeckenden Verdichtungskontrolle ein positiver Effekt auf den erreichten Verdichtungserfolg nachgewiesen werden.