Sonstige
Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
Volltext vorhanden
- ja (42) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Fußgänger (42) (entfernen)
Institut
- Sonstige (42) (entfernen)
Gegenstand des Forschungsvorhabens ist es, die in Deutschland praktizierte Signalisierung des Fußgängerverkehrs mit der Signalfolge Grün-Rot-Grün und dem Räumen der Fußgänger gegen Rot sowie alternative Möglichkeiten der Fußgängersignalisierung zu untersuchen und zu bewerten. Dazu wurden zunächst im In- und Ausland praktizierte Formen der Fußgängersignalisierung auf Grundlage einer Literaturrecherche analysiert. Prinzipiell verfolgenswerte Ansätze mit einer Gelbzeit für Fußgänger, einem Grünblinken und einer Anzeige der verbleibenden Rot- bzw. Grünzeit wurden mittels Befragungen von Fußgängern, Verhaltensbeobachtungen und Unfallanalysen an 17 ausgewählten Signalanlagen in Deutschland und im europäischen Ausland untersucht und bewertet. Im Ergebnis ist festzustellen, dass die Signalfolge Grün-Rot-Grün beibehalten, jedoch in der praktischen Anwendung verbessert werden sollte. Mit einem Grünblinken und einer Restrot-Restgrün-Anzeige können den Verkehrsteilnehmern zusätzliche Informationen vermittelt werden. Eine Gelbzeit für Fußgänger kann nach den Erkenntnissen des Vorhabens nicht empfohlen werden.
Um Fahrzeuge und ihren Fahrzustand erkennen zu können, benötigt ein Fußgänger sensorisch übermittelte Informationen. Über die allgemeine Rolle der auditiven Information bei Wahrnehmung und Verhalten von Fußgängern in Interaktion mit Kraftfahrzeugen bestehen jedoch bislang kaum umfassende Erkenntnisse. Dem Fahrzeugaußengeräusch wird in der Literatur eine zentrale Rolle in der Informationsgewinnung für diejenigen Fußgänger zugeschrieben, die ohne eine Möglichkeit der visuellen Wahrnehmung (Sehbehinderte/Blinde) sind. Auch für Situationen, in denen die visuelle Wahrnehmung prinzipiell möglich ist, aufgrund von Einschränkungen des Gesicht- und/oder Blickfeldes sowie der Aufmerksamkeitskapazität jedoch nicht regelmäßig erfolgen kann, bestehen diesbezügliche Einschätzungen. Der Bericht "Wahrnehmung und Bewertung von Fahrzeugaußengeräuschen durch Fußgänger in verschiedenen Verkehrssituationen und unterschiedlichen Betriebszuständen" gliedert sich in zwei Teile. Der erste Berichtsteil "Auditive Wahrnehmung" liefert einen Beitrag zur Erklärung des Zusammenhangs zwischen Fahrzeugaußengeräuschen und deren Wahrnehmbarkeit in Hinblick auf eine mögliche Gefährdung von Fußgängern (Seheingeschränkte/Normalsehende) für drei ausgewählte Verkehrssituationen (herannahendes, anfahrendes und anhaltendes Fahrzeug). Außerdem wird in diesem Abschnitt geklärt, welche grundsätzlichen Eigenschaften ein synthetisches Fahrzeuggeräusch besitzen muss, um den Fahrzeugzustand "Bremsen" und "Beschleunigen" interpretieren zu können. Der zweite Berichtsteil untersucht die bimodale (auditiv-visuelle) Wahrnehmung von Fußgängern (Seheingeschränkte/Normalsehende) beim anfahrenden (Parkplatzsituation) und anhaltenden (Fußgängerüberwegssituation) Fahrzeug. Die Hörbarkeit zeigt in visuell dominanten Situationen auch bei normalsehenden Personen signifikante Effekte auf die Wahrnehmung und Bewertung von Fahrzeugaußengeräuschen. Hieraus erwächst die abschließende Anregung einer stärkeren Untersuchung und Berücksichtigung der Wahrnehmung von akustischen Fahrzeugs- und Situationsmerkmalen, auch bezüglich nichtblinder Personen, bei praktischen, verkehrssicherheitsorientierten Betrachtungen.
Mit dem Forschungs- und Entwicklungsvorhaben sollten bestehende Wissenslücken zum Verkehrssicherheitspotenzial an innerörtlichen Haltestellen des straßen- und schienengebundenen öffentlichen Personennahverkehrs geschlossen werden. Untersuchungsgegenstand waren Haltestellen im Linienbus- und Straßenbahnverkehr mit Lage im Straßenraum. Neben einer Auswertung der Straßenverkehrsunfallstatistik des Statistischen Bundesamtes erfolgten vertiefende Unfallanalysen in vier Fallbeispielen (Städte Düsseldorf, Leipzig und Zwickau sowie Landkreis Mayen-Koblenz) als Grundlage für ein Sicherheitsranking relevanter Haltestellentypen, ergänzt um Einzelfallanalysen für ausgewählte Haltestellenbereiche unterschiedlichen Typs. Die Untersuchungen erfolgten jeweils auf der Basis von Unfalldaten aus drei Kalenderjahren. Insgesamt wurden in den vier Fallbeispielen rund 2.550 Teilhaltestellen unterschiedlichen Typs untersucht, davon 1.750 Bushaltestellen, 690 Straßenbahnhaltestellen und 110 kombiniert genutzte Haltestellen. In den Haltestellenbereichen waren in 3 Kalenderjahren rund 770 Unfälle mit Personenschaden zu verzeichnen. Rund 85 Prozent (im Landkreis Mayen-Koblenz 91 Prozent) der Bushaltestellen und 30 Prozent der Straßenbahnhaltestellen wiesen in den untersuchten drei Kalenderjahren keinen Unfall mit Personenschaden auf. Als spezifische Kenngröße für die vergleichende Beurteilung der unterschiedlichen Haltestellenformen wurden haltestellenbezogene Unfallkosten UK zugrunde gelegt, um über die Unfallanzahl hinaus auch die Unfallschwere in die Betrachtungen einzubeziehen. Im vorliegenden Falle wurde diese Kenngröße als UK(P) ermittelt, da nur Unfälle mit Personenschäden in die Untersuchungen einbezogen wurden. Verwendet wurden an die Verunglücktenstruktur angepasste Unfallkostensätze. Quantifizierte Ergebnisse konnten für die Bushaltestellentypen "Bucht" und "Fahrbahnrand/Kap" sowie die Straßenbahnhaltestellentypen "Fahrbahnrand/Kap", "Fahrbahn" (mit den Varianten "StVO" und "Zeitinsel") sowie "Seitenbahnsteig" ermittelt werden. Zusammenfassend konnte festgestellt werden: - Im Vergleich der ÖPNV-Teilsysteme sind Bushaltestellen sicherer als Straßenbahnhaltestellen und kombinierte Haltestellen. - Im Vergleich der Haltestellentypen sind Haltestellen am Fahrbahnrand (einschließlich Kaplösungen) am sichersten, gefolgt vom Typ "Bucht" und den beiden auf das ÖPNV-Teilsystem Straßenbahn bezogenen Haltestellentypen "Fahrbahn" und "Seitenbahnsteig". - Bezogen auf das ÖPNV-Teilsystem Bus schneidet der Haltestellentyp "Bucht" deutlich ungünstiger ab als der Typ "Fahrbahnrand/ Kap". - Bezogen auf das ÖPNV-Teilsystem Straßenbahn schneidet der Haltestellentyp "Fahrbahnrand/Kap" am günstigsten ab, gefolgt vom Typ "Fahrbahn". Am ungünstigsten sind die Werte für den Typ "Seitenbahnsteig". - In Bezug auf den Straßenbahnhaltestellentyp "Fahrbahn" ergaben die Ergebnisse zu den beiden Varianten "Fahrbahn, StVO" und "Fahrbahn, Zeitinsel" deutliche Unterschiede. Sowohl bei den spezifischen Unfallkosten als auch in Bezug auf die mittlere jährliche Unfallanzahl pro Teilhaltestelle und die mittleren Unfallkosten von Unfällen mit Personenschaden im Haltestellenbereich ergab die Variante "Zeitinsel" ungünstigere Werte als die Variante "StVO". Empfohlen wird insbesondere: - die Priorisierung des Typs "Fahrbahnrand/Kap" als Standardlösung für Bushaltestellen (VwV-StVO), - eine Neubewertung des Typs "Fahrbahn" und hier wiederum der Variante "StVO" in VwV-StVO und Regelwerken mit dem Ziel einer Priorisierung dieses Typs gegenüber dem Typ "Seitenbahnsteig" (bei vergleichbaren Rahmenbedingungen) sowie der Variante "StVO" gegenüber der Variante "Zeitinsel", die Konkretisierung und Weiterentwicklung der Einsatzkriterien für Zeitinseln sowie - eine verstärkte Berücksichtigung der Verkehrssicherheit von im Haltestellenbereich die Fahrbahn querenden Fußgängern.
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.
In-depth road traffic accident research in Spain is a fairly recent activity. In the past, only accident data that had been retrospectively processed by the national and regional traffic police forces was available. In 1999 Applus+IDIADA set up a permanent accident research unit to carry out indepth analysis of road accidents in Spain. Since then accidents involving cars, motorcycles, coaches and vulnerable road users have been thoroughly studied. The Applus+IDIADA accident research team has carried out work for the various traffic polices in Spain and it is currently involved in several research projects in which accidentology is one of the main tasks. The working methodology of the team is presented in the first part of the paper. In the framework of the European research project "Rollover" (GRD2-2001-50086), Applus+IDIADA has collected data, inspected scenarios and performed virtual reconstructions of twenty-six of the total seventy-six rollover accidents studied. The second half of the paper describes how these accident investigations were used to develop a test procedure for identifying possible improvements to the vehicle structure which augment occupant protection in a rollover scenario. In particular, a proposal for a new drop test for rollover assessment is presented. The cases were analysed for severity, in terms of injury to the occupants and damage to the vehicle, and taking into account whether a seatbelt was worn or not. The worst possible cases were identified as those that had severe occupant injuries and sizable damage to the occupant compartment when seatbelts had been worn. The most severe cases were then analysed further for impact position (roll and pitch angles) and the impact velocity. With these parameters taken into account, the most representative combinations could be found. This resulted in a series of configurations for possible drop tests. The results of the tests indicate where passenger vehicle structures need to be improved in order to increase occupant safety in the event of a rollover crash.
Analysis of pedestrian leg contacts and distribution of contact points across the vehicle front
(2015)
Determining the risk to pedestrians that are impacted by areas of the front bumper not currently regulated in type-approval testing requires an understanding of the target population and the injury risk posed by the edges of the bumper. National statistics show that approximately 10% of all accident casualties are pedestrians, with 20% to 30% of these pedestrian casualties being killed or seriously injured. However, the contact position across the front of the bumper is not recorded in national statistics and so in-depth accident databases (OTS, UK and GIDAS, Germany) were used to examine injury risk in greater detail. The results showed that some injury types and severities of injuries appear to peak around the bumper edges. Although there are sometimes inconsistencies in the data, generally there is no evidence to suggest that the edges of the bumper are less likely to be contacted or cause injury.
Police records about traffic accidents like used by IRTAD (International Road Traffic and Accident Database) and CARE (Community Road Accident Database) do not represent all road injuries. For instance, road accidents of bicyclists without a counterpart are usually not reported. Furthermore, IRTAD-like data contains hardly any information on injury outcome and accident circumstances. This information gap leads to an under-representation of the safety concerns of the most vulnerable road users like children and the elderly both in accident research and safety promotion. Injury registration for the European Injury Database (IDB), in turn, combines details of accident causation with diagnostic information that can be used to assess injury severity and long term consequences. The IDB is collecting data from hospital emergency department patients and is being implemented in a growing number of countries. In this article IDB results on mode of transport and injury outcome are presented from a sample of nine EU member states.
Das Ziel des Forschungsvorhabens war es festzustellen, welche Bordsteinformen für den Einsatz an Überquerungsstellen mit einer Einbauhöhe von 3 cm (eine Einbauhöhe (oder Auftrittshöhe) von 3 cm bedeutet, dass die Oberkante der Auftrittsfläche des Bordsteins 3 cm über dem Niveau der angrenzenden Fahrbahn liegt) sowie vorzugsweise zu verwendeten Bodenindikatoren aus Sicht unterschiedlicher Gruppen behinderter Menschen geeignet sind. Zunächst wurde eine umfangreiche Literaturanalyse nationaler und internationaler Literatur durchgeführt, um allgemeine Gestaltungsgrundsätze für barrierefreie Überquerungsstellen abzuleiten. Zusätzlich dazu sollte eine umfangreiche Befragung sehbehinderter Menschen zu ihren Erfahrungen bei der Mobilität im Straßenraum weiteren Aufschluss geben. Auf Grundlage der Literaturanalyse und Befragung wurde im Rahmen der Untersuchungen ein mehrschichtiges Verfahren aus qualitativen sowie objektiven und subjektiven Methoden angewendet. Dieses sollte darüber Aufschluss geben, welche Borsteinformen und Bodenindikatoren aus Sicht von blinden und sehbehinderten Menschen mit Langstock sowie der Nutzer von rollbaren Hilfsmitteln (Rollator, Rollstuhl) für einen Einbau an Überquerungsstellen bevorzugt werden. Die Untersuchungsergebnisse bestätigen die Einbauhöhe von 3 cm als weiterhin brauchbaren Kompromiss, auch wenn sich mit dieser Einbauhöhe die unterschiedlichen Anforderungen von Rollstuhl- und Rollatornutzern einerseits sowie blinden und stark sehbehinderten Menschen andererseits nicht optimal erfüllen lassen. Allerdings konnten auf Grundlage der Untersuchungsergebnisse Empfehlungen für eine im Rahmen des Kompromisses gut geeignete Bordsteinform an Überquerungsstellen abgeleitet werden. Die Messungen und Versuche mit unterschiedlichen Bodenindikatoren gaben Aufschluss darüber, welche Strukturen im Hinblick auf die Taktilität und die Überrollbarkeit an Überquerungsstellen grundsätzlich gut geeignet sind. Es wurde grundlegende und detaillierte Empfehlungen für die Ausbildung und Anwendung der Bordsteine und Bodenindikatoren an Überquerungsstellen an Hauptverkehrsstraßen ausgearbeitet. Diese sollten in die Fortschreibung relevanter Regelwerke einfließen. Darüber hinaus konnte durch das Forschungsvorhaben zusätzlicher Forschungsbedarf für weitere Verbesserungsmöglichkeiten an Überquerungsstellen aufgezeigt werden.
Neben der zunehmenden Bedeutung der aktiven Sicherheit bleiben Maßnahmen der passiven Sicherheit bei der Entwicklung moderner Kraftfahrzeuge unabdingbar. Die Weiterentwicklung von Maßnahmen zum passiven Fußgängerschutz war zunächst größtenteils durch Verbraucherschutztests wie zum Beispiel Euro NCAP oder JNCAP getrieben und ist nun auch durch gesetzliche Regelungen verpflichtend geworden. Im vorangegangenen Forschungsprojekt der BASt FE 82.229/2002 Schutz von Fußgängern beim Scheibenaufprall ist die Grundlage eines modularen Prüfverfahrens für den Kopfaufprall im Bereich der Windschutzscheibe, bestehend aus einem Versuchs- und einem Simulationsteil, erarbeitet worden. Im Rahmen dieses Projektes wurde ein hybrides Testverfahren bestehend aus Versuch und Simulation ausgearbeitet, das den Bereich der Windschutzscheibe und dabei auch crashaktive Systeme wie Airbags berücksichtigt. Das Testverfahren kombiniert Komponentenversuche mit einem Simulationsteil, in dem Fahrzeug-Fußgänger-Simulationen und lmpaktorsimulationen durchgeführt werden. Zusätzliche Dummyversuche dienten zur Bewertung des Testverfahrens. Alle erarbeiteten virtuellen und realen Testmethoden wurden an einem Referenzfahrzeug (Opel Signum), welches repräsentativ für eine durchschnittliche Mittelklasselimousine steht, durchgeführt. Das Fahrzeug wurde mit einem Airbagsystem ausgerüstet und der Testprozedur mit und ohne diesem System vergleichend unterzogen. Innerhalb dieser Untersuchungen konnte gezeigt werden, dass neue Testmethoden unter Ausnutzung von Simulationen und Komponententests es erlauben, realistischere Versuchsbedingungen unter Berücksichtigung von potenziellen Kopfaufprallpositionen und -zeiten zu definieren. Dabei können sehr gute Übereinstimmungen zwischen Fußgängersimulation und Dummyversuch erreicht werden. Die Randbedingungen für den Kopfaufprall und die Aufprallzeit wurden durch den Einsatz von Fußgängermodellen ermittelt. Weiterhin ermöglichen die Simulationen, zusätzliche Einflussdaten wie Vektoren mit den Kopfaufprallgeschwindigkeiten und -winkeln zu bestimmen.
Pedestrian and cyclist are the most vulnerable road users in traffic crashes. One important aspect of this study was the comparable analysis of the exact impact configuration and the resulting injury patterns of pedestrians and cyclists in view of epidemiology. The secondary aim was assessment of head injury risks and kinematics of adult pedestrian and cyclists in primary and secondary impacts and to correlate the injuries related to physical parameters like HIC value, 3ms linear acceleration, and discuss the technical parameter with injuries observed in real-world accidents based documented real accidents of GIDAS and explains the head injuries by simulated load and impact conditions based on PC-Crash and MADYMO. A subsample of n=402 pedestrians and n=940 bicyclists from GIDAS database, Germany was used for preselection, from which 22 pedestrian and 18 cyclist accidents were selected for reconstruction by initially using PC-Crash to calculate impact conditions, such as vehicle impact velocity, vehicle kinematic sequence and throw out distance. The impact conditions then were employed to identify the initial conditions in simulation of MADYMO reconstruction. The results show that cyclists always suffer lower injury outcomes for the same accident severity. Differences in HIC, head relative impact velocity, 3ms linear contiguous acceleration, maximum angular velocity and acceleration, contact force, throwing distance and head contact timing are shown. The differences of landing conditions in secondary impacts of pedestrians and cyclists are also identified. Injury risk curves were generated by logistic regression model for each predicting physical parameters.
Injury severity of e.g. pedestrians or bikers after crashes with cars that are reversing is almost unknown. However, crash victims of these injuries can frequently be seen in emergency departments and account for a large amount of patients every year. The objective of this study is to analyze injury severity of patients that were crashed into by reversing cars. The Hannover Medical School local accident research unit prospectively documented 43,000 road traffic accidents including 234 crashes involving reversing cars. Injury severity including the abbreviated injury scale (AIS) and the maximum abbreviated injury scale (MAIS) was analyzed as well as the location of the accident. As a result 234 accidents were included into this study. Pedestrians were injured in 141 crashes followed by 70 accidents involving bikers. The mean age of all crash victims was 57 -± 23 years. Most injuries took place on straight stretches (n = 81) as well as parking areas (n = 59), entries (n = 36) or crossroads (n = 24). The AIS of the lower extremities was highest followed by the upper extremities. The AIS of the neck was lowest. The mean MAIS was 1.3 -± 0.6. The paper concludes that the lower extremities show the highest risk to become injured during accidents with reversing cars. However, the risk of severe injuries is likely low.
Validation of human pedestrian models using laboratory data as well as accident reconstruction
(2007)
Human pedestrian models have been developed and improved continually. This paper shows the latest stage in development and validation of the multibody pedestrian model released with MADYMO. The biofidelity of the multibody pedestrian model has been verified using a range of full pedestrian-vehicle impact tests with a large range in body sizes (16 male, 2 female, standing height 160-192cm, weight 53.5-90kg). The simulation results were objectively correlated to experimental data. Overall, the model predicted the measured response well. In particular the head impact locations were accurately predicted, indicated by global correlation scores over 90%. The correlation score for the bumper forces and accelerations of various body parts was lower (47-64%), which was largely attributed to the limited information available on the vehicle contact characteristics (stiffness, damping, deformation). Also, the effects of the large range in published leg fracture tolerances on the predicted risk to leg fracture by the pedestrian model were evaluated and compared with experimental results. The validated mid-size male model was scaled to a range of body sizes, including children and a female. Typical applications for the pedestrian models are trend studies to evaluate vehicle front ends and accident reconstructions. Results obtained in several studies show that the pedestrian models match pedestrian throw distances and impact locations observed in real accidents. Larger sets of well documented cases can be used to further validate the models especially for specific populations as for instance children. In addition, these cases will be needed to evaluate the injury predictive capability of human models. Ongoing developments include a so-called facet pedestrian model with a more accurate geometry description and a more humanlike spine and neck and a full FE model allowing more detailed injury analysis.
Portugal has the highest rate of road fatalities in Europe (2002 and for Eur-15 - CARE database). For this highest rate, the accidents involving pedestrians and motorcycle occupants have a higher contribution than the European average. In the last years, especially accidents involving motorcycles have been investigated and currently two different projects are being carried out, one related with motorcycles accidents and the other with pedestrian accidents. In these projects, countermeasures among others to reduce the fatalities between these two types of road users are being studied. These accidents are investigated with the commercial accident reconstruction software PCCRASH but also new methodologies based on multibody dynamics are in development in order to more accurately study these two types of accidents. In this paper, the methodologies in use for accident reconstruction and new methodologies in development are presented. Speeding his found to be one of the major causes of road fatalities for pedestrians and motorcycle occupants. In the case of motorcycle accidents, these involve mainly young drivers. Aspects as social behavior are also important to understand the causes of some of these accidents. Some examples of accidents occurring in Portugal, involving especially motorcycles and pedestrians are presented and discussed.
Pedestrians represent about 20% of the overall fatalities in Europe- road traffic accidents. In this paper a methodology is proposed to understand why the numbers are so high, especially in the south of Europe and particularly in Portugal, . First a detailed statistical analysis using Ordinal Logistic Regression model (OLR) was applied to the gathered data from all Portuguese accidents with victims in the period 2010-2012. In a second stage accident reconstruction computational techniques using pedestrian biomechanical models are used to evaluate the accident conditions that lead to the injuries, such as the speed and the impact location. For biomechanical injury criterions, the AIS (Abbreviated Injury Scale), the HIC (Head Injury Criterion) and other injury criterions based on the resulting accelerations in the pedestrian's body are used. The statistical model reported that there were several predictors that significantly influenced the pedestrian injury severity in the event of a road accident, such as Pedestrian's age, Pedestrian's gender, Vehicle Design/Category or Driver's gender. The use of injury scales and biomechanical criterions in in-depth investigation of road accidents, such as AIS, can significantly improve the quality of the reconstruction process.
A series of drop tests and vehicle tests with the adult head impactor according to Regulation (EC) 631/2009 and drop tests with the phantom head impactor according to UN Regulation No. 43 have been carried out by the German Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt) on behalf of the German Federal Ministry of Transport, Building and Urban Development (BMVBS). Aim of the test series was to study the injury risk for vulnerable road users, especially pedestrians, in case of being impacted by a motor vehicle in a way described within the European Regulations (EC) 78/2009 and (EC) 631/2009. Furthermore, the applicability of the phantom head drop test described in UN Regulation No. 43 for plastic glazing should be investigated. In total, 30 drop tests, thereof 18 with the adult head impactor and 12 with the phantom head impactor, and 49 vehicle tests with the adult head impactor were carried out on panes of laminated safety glass (VSG), polycarbonate (PC) and laminated polycarbonate (L-PC). The influence of parameters such as the particular material properties, test point locations, fixations, ambient conditions (temperature and impact angle) was investigated in detail. In general, higher values of the Head Injury Criterion (HIC) were observed in tests on polycarbonate glazing. As the HIC is the current criterion for the assessment of head injury risk, polycarbonate glazing has to be seen as more injurious in terms of vulnerable road user protection. In addition, the significantly higher rebound of the head observed in tests with polycarbonate glazing is suspected to lead to higher neck loads and may also cause higher injury risks in secondary impacts of vulnerable road users. However, as in all tests with PC glazing no damage of the panes was observed, the risk of skin cut injuries may be expected to be reduced significantly. The performed test series give no indication for the test procedure prescribed in UN Regulation No. 43 as a methodology to approve glass windscreen not being feasible for polycarbonate glazing, as all PC panes tested fulfilled the UN R 43 requirements. The performance of the windscreen area will not be relevant for vehicle type approval according to the upcoming UN Regulation for pedestrian protection. However, it is recommended that pedestrian protection being considered for plastic windscreens to ensure at least the same level of protection as glass windscreens.
Description of road traffic related knee injuries in published investigations is very heterogeneous. The purpose of this study was to estimate the risk of knee injuries in real world car impacts in Germany focusing vulnerable road users (pedestrians, bicyclists and motorcyclists) and restrained car drivers. The accident research unit analyses technical and medical data collected shortly after the accident at scene. Two different periods (years 1985-1993 and 1995-2003) were compared focusing on knee injuries (Abbreviated Injury Scale (AISKnee) 2/3). In order to determine the influences type of collision, direction and speed as well as the injury pattern and different injury scores (AIS, MAIS, ISS) were examined. 1.794 pedestrians, 742 motorcyclists, 2.728 bicyclists and 1.116 car drivers were extracted. 2% had serious ligamentous or bony injuries in relation to all injured. The risk of injury is higher for twowheelers than for pedestrians, but knee injury severity is higher for the latter group. Overall the current knee injury risk is low and significant reduced comparing both time periods (27%, p<0,0001). Severe injuries (AISKnee 2/3) were below 1%). Improved aerodynamic design of car fronts reduced the risk for severe knee injuries significantly (p=0,0015). Highest risk of injury is for motorcycle followed by pedestrians, respectively. Knee protectors could prevent injuries by reducing local forces. The classically described dashboard injury was rarely identified. The overall injury risk for knee injuries in road traffic is lower than estimated and reduced comparing both periods. The aerodynamic shape of current cars compared to older types reduced the incidence and severity of knee injuries. Further modification and optimization of the interior and exterior design could be a proper measurement. Classic described injury mechanisms were rarely identified. It seems that the AIS is still underestimating extremity injuries and their long term results.
Accident simulation and reconstruction for enhancing pedestrian safety: issues and challenges
(2015)
The enhancement of pedestrian safety represents a major challenge in traffic accidents. This study allows a better understanding of the issues in pedestrian protection. It highlights the potential of in-depth studies in identifying relevant crash parameters interfering in the pedestrian safety. A computational simulation tool was developed to reconstruct pedestrian real-world crashes. A sample of 100 in-depth accident cases was reconstructed from two sources: 40 crashes provided by IFSTTAR-LMA and 60 crashes from CASR. To exemplify the methodology, two accident cases from each database were illustrated. A description of the sample of crashes was presented including the travel and impact speed of the vehicle, the driver reaction, the pedestrian walking speed, the scene configuration with the eventual obstacles, etc. This detailed description is pointing to the major factors affecting the limits of pedestrian safety systems.
Because of actual developments and the continuous increase in the field of drive assistant systems, representative and detailed investigations of accident databases are necessary. This lecture describes the possibility to estimate the potential of primary and secondary safety measures by means of a computerized case by case analysis. Single primary or secondary safety measures as well as a combination of both are presented. The method is exemplarily shown for the primary safety measure "Brake Assist" in pedestrian accidents. Regarding accident prevention only the primary safety measure is determined.
The proportion of older road users is increasing because of demographic change (in the group 65+ from current 18% to about 24% by 2030). The mobility needs of people 65+ often differ from those of younger people. Seniors (65+) are already more involved in fatal accidents than younger road users. According to the age development, the senior share of road deaths in the EU of today is increasing nearly one-fifth to one-third. From the in-depth analysis of accidents generic simulation models were developed. Attention has been paid both to psycho-physical characteristics as well as on the social and physical environment and their specifics in conjunction with seniors. By simulating the defined scenarios and varying the defined relevant parameters, accident influencing factors were examined as a basis for avoidance. In addition, the parameters were varied to show the influence from the vehicle, the pedestrian and the infrastructure to avoid the accident or to characterize the conditions for which the accident is inevitable.
There is a need for detecting characteristics of pedestrian movement before car-pedestrian collisions to trigger a fully reversible pedestrian protection system. For this purpose, a pedestrian sensor system has been developed. In order to evaluate the effectiveness of the sensor system, the in-depth knowledge of car-pedestrian impact scenarios is needed. This study aims at the evaluation of the sensor system. The accident data are selected from the STRADA database. The accident scenarios available in this database were evaluated and the knowledge of the most common scenarios was developed in terms of the pedestrian trajectory, the pedestrian speed, the car trajectory, the car velocity, etc. A mathematical model was then established to evaluate the sensor system with different detective angles. It was found that in order to detect all the pedestrians in the most common scenarios on time the sensor detective angle must be kept larger than 60 degrees.
This study examines the severity and types of injuries sustained by child pedestrians aged 18 years and below in order to identify the body regions at greatest risk for injury in a pedestrian accident. Detailed medical diagnoses were reviewed retrospectively for 572 child pedestrians admitted to an urban pediatric trauma center with injuries during the time period from January 2001 to December 2005. Eighty percent of these children sustained AIS 2 or greater injuries, most commonly to the lower extremity (41%) and head (34%). Fortyfour percent of admitted children had more significant AIS 3 or greater injuries primarily to the head (58%), thorax (17%) and lower extremities (14%). Testing procedures to assess the child- interaction with the motor vehicle should include injury assessment for the pediatric head, thorax and lower extremities. This understanding of how child pedestrians interact with motor vehicles may provide insight into effective countermeasures with potential for implementation in vehicle designs world-wide.
Since 2008, the authors inspected fatal traffic accidents on the spot every year, with the cooperation of Toyota police station in Aichi pref. In the jurisdiction, numbers of fatal accidents were 18 in 2008, 12 in 2009, 14 accidents in 2010, and 16 in 2011. We here report the results of our analysis of information obtained by detailed inspection for those that occurred from 2008 to 2010. We focused on vehicle-to-pedestrian accidents, which accounted for about 45% of all accidents in 2008. Because many accidents occurred on residential roads not far from pedestrians" homes, it was revealed that the decrease of the collision speed by traffic calming such as humps and zone speed management, was highly effective. On the other hand, pedestrian detection technologies seemed to be also effective as a countermeasure on vehicle side. Every pedestrian position against a vehicle was clarified and TTC (Time to Collision) was calculated provisionally. Pedestrian accidents in intersections were also examined. Among the intersection pedestrian accidents within the jurisdiction, compared with the national average in Japan, the ratio of intersections without a signal and the ratio without a pedestrian crossing were high. According to the comparison of the Japanese traffic accident patterns between 2001 and 2008, pedestrian accidents during turning right and turning left did not decrease much. For elderly drivers, these accidents occurred very often. Finally, single vehicle accidents were analysed with the accident pattern analysis methods used above. There were high numbers of single vehicle accidents against object on single roads. Although fatal accidents against guardrails decreased, the numbers of fatal accidents against a utility pole and a sign pole were nearly constant. As for the impact with narrow width objects such as utility poles, the fatality rate was very high, and countermeasures of both road infrastructure and vehicles seem to be effective.
This study aimed at comparing head Wrap Around Distance (WAD) of Vulnerable Road User (VRU) obtained from the German in-depth Accident Database (GIDAS), the China in-depth Accident Database (CIDAS) and the Japanese in-depth Accident Database (ITARDA micro). Cumulative distribution of WAD of pedestrian and cyclist were obtained for each database (AIS2+) showing that WAD of cyclists were larger than the ones of pedestrians. Comparing three regions, the 50%tile WAD of GIDAS was larger than that of both Asian accident databases. Using linear regression that might predict WAD of pedestrians and cyclists from Impact speed and VRU height, WADs were calculated to be 206cm/219cm (Pedestrian/Cyclist) for GIDAS, 170cm/192cm for CIDAS and 211cm/235cm for ITARDA. In addition, this study may be helpful for reconsideration of WAD measurement alignment between accident reconstruction and test procedures.
This study aimed to identify the occurrence, type and mechanisms of the traumatic injuries of the vulnerable road users in vehicle collisions, and to determine the effects of human, engineering, and environment factors on traffic accidents and injuries. The pedestrian accident cases were collected in the years 2000 to 2005 from Changsha Wujing hospital China and Accident Research Unit at Medical University Hannover in Germany. A statistic analysis was carried out using the collected accident data. The results from analysis of Changsha data were compared with results from analysis of GIDAS data Hannover. The injury severities were determined using AIS code and ISS values. The results were presented in terms of cause of injuries, injury distributions, injury patterns, injury severity. The factors influenced the injury outcomes were proposed and discussed for the vehicle transport environment and road users. The results were discussed with regard to accident data collection, accident sampling and injury distributions etc. In the urban area of Changsha, motorcycles and passenger cars are most frequently involved in vehicle pedestrian accidents. Head and lower extremities injuries are the predominant types of pedestrian injuries. The pedestrian accidents were identified as vital issue in urban traffic safety and therefore a high priority should be given to this road user group in research of safe urban transportation. In Hannover area, cars are most frequently involved in traffic accidents, injured pedestrians are involved in road traffic of Germany in 13% of all causalities only in 2005 and have nearly the same number as motorcyclists, but the half of bicyclists.
Sowohl die Zahl der im Straßenverkehr Getöteten wie auch die der Schwerverletzten sind nach Angaben der amtlichen Statistiken in Deutschland seit Jahren rückläufig. Die Gruppe der Schwerverletzten ist allerdings sehr heterogen und umfasst alle Unfallopfer, die für mindestens 24 Stunden in einem Krankenhaus behandelt wurden. Die vorliegende Untersuchung versucht, mit Hilfe von Daten des Traumaregisters der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Unfallchirurgie (DGU) die Frage zu beantworten, ob auch bei den besonders schwer verletzten Verkehrsunfallopfern ein Rückgang der Zahlen zu beobachten ist. Dazu wurden "schwerstverletzte" Patienten definiert als solche, die im Injury Severity Score (ISS) mindestens 9 Punkte erreicht haben und zudem intensivmedizinisch behandelt werden mussten. Der Zeitraum der Untersuchung umfasst zehn Jahre von 1997 bis 2006, der für einige Fragestellungen zusätzlich in zwei je 5-jährige Phasen unterteilt wurde. Ab 2002 (Phase 2) ist auch eine separate Auswertung für Fahrrad- und Motorradfahrer möglich. Die erste Fragestellung richtete sich auf die Veränderung der Anzahl schwerstverletzter Verkehrsunfallopfer über die Zeit. Dafür wurden die Daten von über 11.000 Patienten aus 67 verschiedenen Kliniken betrachtet. Pro Klinik wurde ein Durchschnittswert für die Anzahl von Verkehrsunfallopfern bestimmt, der dann mit der tatsächlich beobachteten Zahl verglichen wurde. Im Ergebnis zeigte sich, dass die relativen Abweichungen vom Durchschnitt insgesamt nur etwa -±10% betragen und dass kein deutlicher Trend einer Abnahme oder Zunahme der Schwerstverletztenzahlen in den vergangenen 10 Jahren erkennbar ist. In der zweiten Fragestellung wurde untersucht, ob und wie stark ein Rückgang der Letalität zu einem Anstieg der Schwerstverletztenzahlen geführt haben könnte. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass in den letzten beiden Jahren deutlich weniger Patienten im Krankenhaus verstorben sind, als dies nach ihrer Prognose zu erwarten gewesen wäre. Dieser Rückgang der Letalitätsrate von absolut bis zu 5 (in 2006: Prognose 18% versus beobachtet 13%) trägt damit auch zu einer Zunahme bei der Zahl der Schwerstverletzten bei. Zur Abschätzung der Prognose wurde ein im Traumaregister entwickeltes und validiertes Scoresystem (RISC) eingesetzt. In der letzten Fragestellung sollte geklärt werden, ob sich das Verletzungsmuster bei den Schwerstverletzten in den vergangenen zehn Jahren und abhängig von der Art der Verkehrsteilnahme verändert hat. Insgesamt konnte gezeigt werden, dass der relative Anteil der Autofahrer rückläufig war, von 60% auf 50%. Bei den verletzten Körperregionen zeigt das Schädel-Hirn-Trauma den deutlichsten Rückgang von 69 % auf 60% insgesamt. Dieser Trend ist bei allen Verkehrsbeteiligten erkennbar. Lediglich Verletzungen der Wirbelsäule werden häufiger gesehen, was aber auch ein Effekt der verbesserten CT-Diagnostik sein kann, zum Beispiel beim Ganzkörper-CT. Je nach Art der Verkehrsbeteiligung zeigen sich sehr unterschiedliche Verletzungsmuster. Verletzungen des Kopfes sind bei Radfahrern und Fußgängern dominierend (über 70%), während Motorradfahrer hier die günstigsten Raten zeigen (45%). Motorrad- und Autofahrer haben die höchsten Raten für Verletzungen des Brustkorbs und im Bauchraum, bedingt durch die im Mittel höheren einwirkenden Kräfte auf den Körper. Insgesamt lassen sich die Daten des DGU-Traumaregisters gut nutzen, um typische Verletzungsmuster zu beschreiben und um relative Veränderungen bei der Zahl der Schwerstverletzten über die Zeit nachzuweisen. Beobachtungszeiträume von zehn Jahren und mehr, wie im vorliegenden Fall, ermöglichen auch aktuelle Trendaussagen. Epidemiologische Aussagen wie in den amtlichen Statistiken sind aber nur sehr eingeschränkt möglich, da das Traumaregister bisher nur auf freiwilliger Basis Daten sammelt.
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.
The paper aims to study the injury risk and kinematics of pedestrians involved in different passenger vehicle collisions. Furthermore, the difference of pedestrian kinematics in the accidents involved minivan and sedan was analyzed. The 18 sample cases of passenger car to pedestrian collisions were selected from the database of In-depth Investigation of Vehicle Accident in Changsha of China (IVAC),of which the 12 pedestrian accidents involved in a minivan impact for each case, and the 6 accidents in a sedan impact for each. The selected cases were reconstructed by using mathematical models of pedestrians and accident vehicles in a multi-body dynamic code MADYMO environment. The logistic regression models of the risks for pedestrian AIS 3+ injuries and fatalities were developed in terms of vehicle impact speed by analyzing the minivan-pedestrian and sedan-pedestrian accidents. The difference of pedestrian kinematics was identified by comparing the results from reconstructed pedestrian accidents between the minivans and sedans collisions. The result shows that there is a significant correlation among the impact speed and the severity of pedestrian injuries. The minivan poses greater risk to pedestrian than sedan at the same impact speed. The kinematics of pedestrian was greatly influenced by vehicle front shape.
The paper presents a methodology for the benefit estimation of several secondary safety systems for pedestrians, using the exceptional data depth of GIDAS. A total of 667 frontal pedestrian accidents up to 40kph and more than 500 AIS2+ injuries have been considered. In addition to the severity, affected body region, exact impact point on the vehicle, and the causing part of every injury, the related Euro NCAP test zone was determined. One results of the study is a detailed impact distribution for AIS2+ injuries across the vehicle front. It can be stated, how often a test zone or vehicle part is hit by pedestrians in frontal accidents and which role the ground impact plays. Basing on that, different secondary safety measures can be evaluated by an injury shift method concerning their real world effectiveness. As an example, measures concerning the Euro NCAP pedestrian rating tests have been evaluated. It was analysed which Euro NCAP test zones are the most effective ones. In addition, real test results have been evaluated. Using the presented methodology, other secondary safety like the active bonnet (pop-up bonnet) or a pedestrian airbag measures can be evaluated.
Injury probability functions for pedestrians and bicyclists based on real-world accident data
(2017)
The paper is focusing on the modelling of injury severity probabilities, often called as Injury Risk Functions (IRF). These are mathematical functions describing the probability for a defined population and for possible explanatory factors (variables) to sustain a certain injury severity. Injury risk functions are becoming more and more important as basis for the assessment of automotive safety systems. They contribute to the understanding of injury mechanisms, (prospective) evaluation of safety systems and definition of protection criteria or are used within regulation and/or consumer ratings. In all cases, knowledge about the correlation between mechanical behavior and injury severity is needed. IRFs are often based on biomechanical data. This paper is focusing on the derivation of injury probability models from real world accident data of the GIDAS database (German In-depth Accident Study). In contrast to most academic terms there is no explicit term definition or definition of creation processes existing for injury probability models based on empirical data. Different approaches are existing for such kind of models in the field of accident research. There is a need for harmonization in terms of the used methods and data as well as the handling with the existing challenges. These are preparation of the dataset, model assumptions, censored/unknown data, evaluation of model accuracy, definition of dependent and independent variable, and others. In the presented study, several empirical, statistical and phenomenological approaches were analyzed regarding their advantages and disadvantages and also their applicability. Furthermore, the identification of appropriate prediction parameters for the injury severity of pedestrians has been considered. Due to its main effect on injuries of pedestrians and bicyclists, the importance of the secondary impact has also been analyzed. Finally, the model accuracy, evaluated by several criteria, is the rating factor that gives the quality and reliability for application of the resulting models. After the investigation and evaluation of statistical approaches one method was chosen and appropriate prediction variables were examined. Finally, all findings were summarized and injury risk functions for pedestrians in real world accidents were created. Additionally, the paper gives instructions for the interpretation and usage of such functions. The presented results include IRFs for several injury severity levels and age groups. The presented models are based on a high amount of real world accidents and describe very well the injury severity probability of pedestrians and bicyclists in frontal collisions with current vehicles. The functions can serve as basis for the evaluation of effectiveness of systems like Pedestrian-AEB or Bicycle-AEB.
Accident data shows that the vast majority of pedestrian accidents involve a passenger car. A refined method for estimating the potential effectiveness of a technology designed to support the car driver in mitigating or avoiding pedestrian accidents is presented. The basis of the benefit prediction method consists of accident scenario information for pedestrian-passenger car accidents from GIDAS, including vehicle and pedestrian velocities. These real world pedestrian accidents were first reconstructed and the system effectiveness was determined by comparing injury outcome with and without the functionality enabled for each accident. The predictions from Volvo Cars" general Benefit Estimation Model are refined by including the actual system algorithm and sensing models for a relevant car in the simulation environment. The feasibility of the method is proven by a case study on a authentic technology; the Auto Brake functionality in Collision Warning with Full Auto Brake and Pedestrian Detection (CWAB-PD). Assuming the system is adopted by all vehicles, the Case Study indicates a 24% reduction in pedestrian fatalities for crashes where the pedestrians were struck by the front of a passenger car.
A total survey of road traffic accidents involving most severely injured, defined as sustaining a polytrauma or severe monotrauma (ISS > 15) or being killed, was conducted over 14 months in a large study region in Germany. Data on injuries, pre-clinical and clinical care, crash circumstances and vehicle damage were obtained both prospectively and retrospectively from trauma centers, dispatch centers, police and fire departments. 149 patients with a polytrauma and eight with a severe monotrauma were recorded altogether. 22 patients died in hospital. Another 76 victims had deceased at the accident scene. In 2008, 49 % of patients treated with life-threatening injuries were car or van occupants, 21 % motorcyclists, 18 % cyclists and 10 % pedestrians. Among fatalities at the scene, vehicle occupants constituted an even larger portion. The number of road users with life-threatening trauma in the region was extrapolated to the German situation. It suggests that 10 % among the "seriously injured" as defined in national accident statistics are surviving accident victims with a polytrauma or severe monotrauma.
To elucidate the risk of pedestrians, bicycle and motorbike users, data of two accident research units from 1999 to 2014 were analysed in regard to demographic data, collision details, preclinical and clinical data using SPSS. 14.295 injured vulnerable road users were included. 92 out of 3610 pedestrians ("P", 2.5%), 90 out of 8307 bicyclists ("B", 1.1%) and 115 out of 4094 motorcycle users ("M", 2.8%) were diagnosed with spinal fractures. Thoracic fractures were most frequent ahead of lumbar and cervical fractures. Car collisions were most frequent mechanism (68, 62 and 36%). MAIS was 3.8, 2.8 and 3.2 for P, B and A with ISS 32, 16 and 23. AIS-head was 2.2, 1.3 and 1.5). Vulnerable road users are at significant risk for spine fractures. These are often associated with severe additional injuries, e.g. the head and a very high overall trauma severity (polytrauma).
The objective of the study is to measure the risk of pedestrian and bicyclist in urban traffic through an analysis of real-world accident data. The kinematics and injury mechanisms for both pedestrian and bicyclists are investigated to find the correlation of injury risks with injury related parameters. For this purpose, firstly 338 cases are selected as a sample from an IVAC accident database based on the In-depth Investigation of Vehicle Accident in Changsha of China. A statistic measurement of the fatality and serious injury risks with respect to impact speed was carried out by logistic regression analysis. Secondly, 12 pedestrian and 12 bicyclist accidents were further selected for reconstruction with MADYMO program. A comparative analysis was conducted based on the results from accident analysis and computer reconstructions for the injury risk, head impact conditions and dynamic response of pedestrians and bicyclists. The results indicate that bicyclists suffered lower risks of severe injuries and fatalities compared with pedestrians. The risks of AIS 3+ injury and fatality are 50% for pedestrians at impact speeds of 53.2 km/h and 63.3 km/h, respectively, while that for bicyclists at 62.5 km/h and 71.1 km/h, respectively. The findings could have a contribution to get a better understanding of pedestrians" and bicyclists" exposures in urban traffic in China, and provide background knowledge to generate strategies for pedestrian protection.
Zu den gefährlichsten Situationen im Straßenverkehr gehört der Konflikt zwischen einem Lkw und einem ungeschützten Verkehrsteilnehmer UVT (Radfahrer und Fußgänger). In Deutschland ereignen sich jährlich schätzungsweise 135 Unfälle mit Personenschaden, an denen nach rechts abbiegende Lkw (>3,5 t) und UVT beteiligt sind. Die UVT geraten dabei oft unter den Lkw und werden dann von einer der Achsen überrollt. Aus der Unfallanalyse ergab sich, dass der Erstkontakt häufig (57%) im Bereich der rechten vorderen Lkw-Ecke erfolgt. Die Hälfte der UVT gerieten noch vor oder im unmittelbaren Bereich des rechten Vorderrads unter den Lkw. Baustellen- und Kommunalfahrzeuge waren mit 46% häufig an den Unfällen beteiligt. Das direkte und das indirekte Sichtfeld sind zentrale Einflussgrößen für die Situation des rechts abbiegenden Lkw. Besonders die unzureichende Sicht nach vorn und nach rechts bereitet den Lkw-Fahrern erhebliche Probleme. An der Verbesserung der Information über die Verkehrssituation für den Lkw-Fahrer wird vielfach gearbeitet. Einzelne Lösungsansätze basieren auf dem Einsatz zusätzlicher Spiegel. Andere Lösungen modifizieren die bislang übliche Spiegelzahl in Form und Anbringung. Das Versuchsprogramm umfasste neben der Nachbildung der besonders häufigen und kritischen Situationen der rechts abbiegenden Lkw mit UVT-Dummies auch statische Untersuchungen des Sichtfeldes. Neben einem Lkw mit Standardspiegeln kam dabei ein Forschungsträger mit einem durch die Frontscheibe einsehbaren Spiegelsystem zum Einsatz. Das Projekt setzte sich auch mit der Wirkung des Seitenschutzes auseinander. Die bislang als Bauvorschrift wirkende Richtlinie 89/297/EWG sollte zukünftig zu einer Wirkvorschrift unter Einbeziehung des Pkw - Anpralls geändert werden. Das im Rahmen des Projektes erstellte Sicherheitskonzept beinhaltet Maßnahmen zur Reduzierung des Gefahrenpotenzials für UVT durch rechts abbiegende Lkw. Dazu gehören unter anderem abgesenkte Unterkanten der Front- und Seitenscheiben und zusätzliche Kamera-Monitor-Systeme. Das neuartige Spiegelsystem des MIM-Fahrzeugs von DC verbessert die indirekte Sicht für den Lkw-Fahrer deutlich und reduziert damit die Unfallgefahr. Die in der Entwicklung befindlichen Abbiegeassistenten zeigen die zukünftige Richtung für elektronische Fahrerunterstützung (MAN Demonstrator) auf. Ein beim Rechtsabbiegen aktivierter akustischer Signalgeber am Lkw wäre zur Information der UVT hilfreich. Eine weitere Option besteht in der Nutzung der seitlichen Markierungsleuchten des Lkws als zusätzliche Fahrtrichtungsanzeiger beim Abbiegen. Fahrbahn-Knotenpunkte können noch sicherer gestaltet werden. An ampelgeregelten Knotenpunkten würde eine vollständige Phasentrennung des Grünlichts oder ein Phasenverzug (früheres Grünlicht für UVT) Unfälle zwischen Lkw und UVT vermeiden. Weiterhin wirken sich eine versetzte Anordnung der Haltelinien und ein Verschwenken der Radfahrwege und Gehwege weg vom Knotenmittelpunkt positiv aus. Der Gesetzgeber sollte -§ 5 (8) StVO ändern, der des Radfahrern und Mofafahrern erlaubt, stehende Kraftfahrzeuge rechts zu überholen. 10% der untersuchten Abbiegeunfälle sind in dieser Situation passiert. Aufklärungsarbeit bezüglich der Sichtprobleme am Lkw sowie über das Bewegungsverhalten beim Rechtsabbiegen ist dringend erforderlich. Es ist auch zu überlegen, ob Aktivitäten von Herstellern beziehungsweise Unternehmern anerkannt werden, die mehr tun als die gesetzlichen Vorschriften verlangen, zu einer Lockerung vorhandener Restriktionen führen können. Es gibt in innerstädtischen Bereichen für einige Fußgängerzonen vorgesehene Zeitfenster zur Anlieferung von Gütern. Solche Zeitfenster könnten für mit anerkannten zusätzlichen Sicherheitseinrichtungen ausgerüstete Lkw ausgedehnt werden. Schwere Lkw aus bestimmten innerörtlichen Bereichen möglichst herauszuhalten, um UVT zu schützen, ist nicht praktikabel. Selbst wenn es gelänge, für die Belieferung mit Post und Waren akzeptable Alternativen zu bieten, bliebe nach wie vor der Baustellenverkehr und die kommunale Entsorgung. An 46% der untersuchten Unfälle waren derartige Lkw beteiligt.
This report gives an overview of pedestrian accidents on Japanese roads. Database used for the analysis is national traffic accident data based on police reports. Relevant measures and background information ranging from vehicle safety, engineering and education are briefly reviewed, and area for further improvement is discussed.rn
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-®.
Recent findings from real-world accident data have shown that fatality risks for pedestrians are substantially lower than generally reported in the traffic safety literature. One of the keys to this insight has been the large and random sample of car-to-pedestrian crashes available in the German In-Depth Accident Study (GIDAS). Another key factor has been the proper use of weight factors in order to adjust for outcome-based sampling bias in the accident data. However, a third factor, a priori of unknown importance, has not yet been properly analysed. This is the influence of errors in impact speed estimation. In this study, we derived a statistical model of the impact speed errors for pedestrian accidents present in the GIDAS database. The error model was then applied to investigate the effect of the estimation error on the pedestrian fatality risk as a function of car impact speed. To this end, we applied a method known as the SIMulation-EXtrapolation (SIMEX) method. It was found that the risk curve is fairly tolerant to some amount of random measurement error, but that it does become flattened. It is therefore important that the accident investigations and reconstructions are of high quality to assure that systematic errors are minimised and that the random errors are under control.
In the course of the EUROPEAN PROJECT TRACE all fatally injured pedestrians autopsied at the Institute for Legal Medicine in Munich in 2004 had been analysed by using the "Human Functional Failure (HFF) analysis" method. It was possible to apply this method although some restrictions have to be taken into account. The results derived from this analysis comprise first the failures the pedestrians (most often "impairment of sensorimotor and cognitive abilities") and the opponents (most often " Non-detection in visibility constraints conditions") faced in the accident, second the conflicts and tasks (pedestrian crossing the street conflicting with a vehicle from the side (which was going ahead on a straight road), the degree of accident involvement (pedestrians often the primary active part), and further the contributing factors to the accident (pedestrians most often "alcohol (> 0.05% BAC)", opponents most often "visibility constraints").
Detailed investigations and reconstructions of real accidents involving vulnerable road users
(2005)
The aim of this research is to improve knowledge about vulnerable road users accidents and more specifically pedestrians or cyclists. This work has been based on a complete analysis of real accidents. From accidents chosen from an in-depth multidisciplinary investigation (psychology, technical, medical), we have tried to identify the configuration of the impact: car speed, pedestrian or cyclist orientations. Then, we have made a numerical modelling of the same configuration with a multibody software. In particular, we have reproduced the anthropometry of the victim and the front shape of the car. A first simulation has been performed on this starting configuration. Next, effects of some parameters such as car velocity or victim position at impact have been numerically studied in order to find the best correlations with all indications produced by the in-depth analysis. Finally, the retained configuration was close to the presumed real accident conditions because it reproduces in particular the same impact points on the car, the same injuries, and is according to the driver statement. This double approach associating an in-depth accident analysis and a numerical simulation has been applied on pedestrian-to-car and bicyclist-tocar accidents. It has allowed us to better understand the real kinematics of such impacts. Even if this method is based on a case to case study, it underlines which parameters are relevant on a vulnerable road user accident investigation and reconstruction.
This study aimed at prediction of long bone fractures and assessment of lower extremity injury mechanisms in real world passenger car to pedestrian collision. For this purpose, two pedestrian accident cases with detail recorded lower limb injuries were reconstructed via combining MBS (Multi-body system) and FE (Finite element) methods. The code of PC Crash was used to determine the boundary conditions before collision, and then MBS models were used to reproduce the pedestrian kinematics and injuries during crash. Furthermore, a validated lower limb FE model was chosen to conduct reconstruction of injuries and prediction of long bone fracture via physical parameters of von Mises stress and bending moment. The injury outcomes from simulations were compared with hospital recorded injury data and the same long bone fracture patterns and positions can be observed. Moreover, the calculated long bone fracture tolerance corresponded to the outcome from cadaver tests. The result shows that FE model is capable to reproduce the dynamic injury process and is an effective tool to predict the risk of long bone fractures.
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.
Recently, EuroNCAP updated the upper legform test protocols. The main objective of this study is to establish the upper legform test in KIDAS (Korean In-depth Accident Study) taking into account domestic pedestrian accident data as well as anthropometric data to protect elderly pedestrians whose average height and weight is much smaller and lighter than other age groups, especially compared to Europeans. Therefore 230 cases of pedestrian accidents from KIDAS were investigated to explore the injury severity of body regions as well as age related injury patterns. Injuries of all body regions were examined, with a special focus on injuries of abdomen and pelvic area. On the other hand, in order to explore Korea's pedestrian accident environment, national police data and KIDAS (Korean In-depth Accident Study) data were compared. The results should be taken into account in future analyses and possible improvements, such as regulations and KNCAP test protocols, of the pedestrian safety policy in Korea.