Effects of road geometry and traffic volumes on rural roadway accident rates.

Author(s)
Karlaftis, M.G. & Golias, I.
Year
Abstract

This paper revisits the question of the relationship between rural road geometric characteristics, accident rates and their prediction, using a rigorous non-parametric statistical methodology known as hierarchical tree-based regression. The goal of this paper is twofold; first, it develops a methodology that quantitatively assesses the effects of various highway geometric characteristics on accident rates and, second, it provides a straightforward, yet fundamentally and mathematically sound way of predicting accident rates on rural roads. The results show that although the importance of isolated variables differs between two-lane and multilane roads, 'geometric design' variables and 'pavement condition' variables are the two most important factors affecting accident rates. Further, the methodology used in this paper allows for the explicit prediction of accident rates for given highway sections, as soon as the profile of a road section is given. (Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
I E113539 /82 / ITRD E113539
Source

Accident Analysis & Prevention. 2002 /05. 34(3) Pp357-65 (14 Refs.)

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