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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.
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
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.
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.