Investigating speed-safety association: Considering the unobserved heterogeneity and human factors mediation effects

被引:2
|
作者
Nassiri, Habibollah [1 ]
Mohammadpour, Seyed Iman [1 ]
机构
[1] Sharif Univ Technol, Civil Engn Dept, Tehran, Iran
来源
PLOS ONE | 2023年 / 18卷 / 02期
关键词
ROAD SAFETY; VEHICLE CRASHES; FIMIX-PLS; MODEL; FREQUENCY; SEVERITY; IMPACTS; WEATHER; RISK;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0281951
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The relationship between mean speed and crash likelihood is unclear in the literature. The contradictory findings can be attributed to the masking effects of the confounding variables in this association. Moreover, the unobserved heterogeneity has almost been criticized as a reason behind the current inconclusive results. This research provides an effort to develop a model that analyzes the mean speed-crash frequency relationship by crash severity and type. Also, the confounding and mediation effects of the environment, driver, and traffic-related attributes have been considered. To this end, the loop detector and crash data were aggregated daily for rural multilane highways of Tehran province, Iran, covering two years, 2020-2021. The partial least squares path modeling (PLS-PM) was employed for crash causal analysis along with the finite mixture partial least squares (FIMIX-PLS) segmentation to account for potential unobserved heterogeneity between observations. The mean speed was negatively and positively associated with the frequency of property damage-only (PDO) and severe accidents, respectively. Moreover, driver-related variables, including tailgating, distracted driving, and speeding, played key mediation roles in associating traffic and environmental factors with the crash risk. The higher the mean speed and the lower the traffic volume, the higher odds of distracted driving. Distracted driving was, in turn, associated with the higher vulnerable road users (VRU) accidents and single-vehicle accidents, triggering a higher frequency of severe accidents. Moreover, lower mean speed and higher traffic volume were positively correlated with the percentage of tailgating violations, which, in turn, predicted multi-vehicle accidents as the main predictor of PDO crash frequency. In conclusion, the mean speed effects on the crash risk are entirely different for each crash type through distinct crash mechanisms. Hence, the distinct distribution of crash types in different datasets might have led to current inconsistent results in the literature.
引用
收藏
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Patient Safety in the Cardiac Operating Room: Human Factors and Teamwork: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association
    Wahr, Joyce A.
    Prager, Richard L.
    Abernathy, J. H., III
    Martinez, Elizabeth A.
    Salas, Eduardo
    Seifert, Patricia C.
    Groom, Robert C.
    Spiess, Bruce D.
    Searles, Bruce E.
    Sundt, Thoralf M., III
    Sanchez, Juan A.
    Shappell, Scott A.
    Culig, Michael H.
    Lazzara, Elizabeth H.
    Fitzgerald, David C.
    Thourani, Vinod H.
    Eghtesady, Pirooz
    Ikonomidis, John S.
    England, Michael R.
    Sellke, Frank W.
    Nussmeier, Nancy A.
    CIRCULATION, 2013, 128 (10) : 1139 - 1169
  • [32] An Evaluation of the Effects of Human Factors and Ergonomics on Health Care and Patient Safety Practices: A Systematic Review
    Mao, Xuanyue
    Jia, Pengli
    Zhang, Longhao
    Zhao, Pujing
    Chen, Ying
    Zhang, Mingming
    PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (06):
  • [33] Modeling the uncertain effects of human factors upon the safety of airport approaches via pilot modeling
    Fu, S. (sfu@sjtu.edu.cn), 2013, The Aeronautical and Astronautical Society of the Republic of China (45):
  • [34] Integrated reliability and maintainability analysis of Computerized Numerical Control Turning Center considering the effects of human and organizational factors
    Patil, Rajkumar Bhimgonda
    JOURNAL OF QUALITY IN MAINTENANCE ENGINEERING, 2020, 26 (01) : 87 - 103
  • [35] Determine independent gut microbiota-diseases association by eliminating the effects of human lifestyle factors
    Congmin Zhu
    Xin Wang
    Jianchu Li
    Rui Jiang
    Hui Chen
    Ting Chen
    Yuqing Yang
    BMC Microbiology, 22
  • [36] Determine independent gut microbiota-diseases association by eliminating the effects of human lifestyle factors
    Zhu, Congmin
    Wang, Xin
    Li, Jianchu
    Jiang, Rui
    Chen, Hui
    Chen, Ting
    Yang, Yuqing
    BMC MICROBIOLOGY, 2022, 22 (01)
  • [37] Synergistic Driving Effects of Risk Factors on Human Brucellosis in Datong City, China: A Dynamic Perspective from Spatial Heterogeneity
    Shen, Li
    Sun, Ming-Hao
    Ma, Wen-Tao
    Hu, Qing-Wu
    Zhao, Chen-Xi
    Yang, Zu-Rong
    Liu, Kun
    Shao, Zhong-Jun
    Jiang, Cheng-Hao
    SSRN, 2023,
  • [38] Synergistic driving effects of risk factors on human brucellosis in Datong City, China: A dynamic perspective from spatial heterogeneity
    Shen, Li
    Sun, Ming-hao
    Ma, Wen-tao
    Hu, Qing-wu
    Zhao, Chen-xi
    Yang, Zu-rong
    Jiang, Cheng-hao
    Shao, Zhong-jun
    Liu, Kun
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2023, 894
  • [39] Exploring the Effects of Variable Speed Limit on the Car-Following Process on Bridges in Fog with Consideration of Human Factors
    Dai, Yibo
    Zhao, Xiaohua
    Luan, Sen
    Wang, Yuejia
    JOURNAL OF TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING PART A-SYSTEMS, 2025, 151 (04)
  • [40] Considering Climatic Factors, Time Lag, and Cumulative Effects of Climate Change and Human Activities on Vegetation NDVI in Yinshanbeilu, China
    Wang, Sinan
    Liu, Xiaomin
    Wu, Yingjie
    PLANTS-BASEL, 2023, 12 (18):