Development of performance specifications for the occupant classification anthropometric test device (OCATD).

Author(s)
Reed, M.P. Ebert, S.M. & Schneider, L.W.
Year
Abstract

Advanced airbag systems use a variety of sensors to classify vehicle occupants so that the airbag deployment can be modulated accordingly. One potential input to such systems is the distribution of pressure applied to the seat surface by the occupant. However, the development of such systems is hindered by the lack of suitable human surrogates. The OCATD program has developed two new surrogates for advanced airbag applications representing a small adult woman and a six-year-old child. This paper describes the development of performance specifications for the OCATDs based on a study of the seat surface pressure distributions produced by vehicle occupants. The pressure distributions of sixty-eight small women and children ranging in body weight between 23 and 48 kg were measured on four seats in up to twelve postures per seat. The data were analysed to determine the parameters of the pressure distribution that best predict occupant body weight. Target values for these parameters were then developed for the two OCATD sizes. Measurements of pressure distributions produced by the OCATDs showed good agreement between the human-derived targets and the OCATD performance.

Publication

Library number
C 20384 (In: C 20346 CD-ROM) /84 /91 / ITRD E112149
Source

In: Proceedings of the seventeenth International Technical Conference on Enhanced Safety of Vehicles ESV, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, June 4-7, 2001, 9 p., 3 ref.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.