Modeling road traffic crashes with zero-inflation and site-specific random effects

Author(s)
Huang, H.; Chin, H.C.
Year

Zero-inflated count models are increasingly employed in many fields in case of 'zero-inflation'. In modeling road traffic crashes, it has also shown to be useful in obtaining a better model-fitting when zero crash counts are over-presented. However, the general specification of zero-inflated model can not account for the multilevel data structure in crash data, which may be an important source of overdispersion.
This paper examines zero-inflated Poisson regression with site-specific random effects (REZIP) with comparison to random effect Poisson model and standard zero-inflated poison model. A practical and flexible procedure, using Bayesian inference with Markov Chain Monte Carlo algorithm and cross-validation predictive density techniques, is applied for model calibration and suitability assessment. Using crash data in Singapore (1998–2005), the illustrative results demonstrate that the REZIP model may significantly improve the model-fitting and predictive performance of crash prediction models. This improvement can contribute to traffic safety management and engineering practices such as countermeasure design and safety evaluation of traffic treatments.

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Pages
445-462
Published in
Statistical Methods & Applications
19 (3)
Library number
20220055 ST [electronic version only]

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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.