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Investigating Crash Interaction of Younger and Older Drivers. Hossein Naraghi. Masters Thesis Defense October 15, 2004 . Iowa State University. Overview. The problem Demographics Risk assessment Statewide interaction analysis Causal factors Spatial analysis Geometric analysis
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Investigating Crash Interaction of Younger and Older Drivers Hossein Naraghi Masters Thesis Defense October 15, 2004 Iowa State University
Overview • The problem • Demographics • Risk assessment • Statewide interaction analysis • Causal factors • Spatial analysis • Geometric analysis • Temporal analysis • Conclusions, limitations, & recommendations
Younger drivers (Y) • Young Drivers • Inexperience • Poor judgment • Risk taking behavior
Older drivers (O) • Older Drivers • Reduction in physical abilities • Reduction in cognitive capabilities • “Too” careful?
Compound effect? What will occur as a result of interaction of these two critical age groups?
Licensed Drivers by Age Group Iowa has 9%more Young Iowa has 20% more Older Iowa has 50%more Young Drivers Iowa has 18% more Older Drivers
Iowa older driver trends • Total population is relatively flat • Older driver population increase caused by … • More older population • Higher % licensed
Iowa older driver trends • In 1970 only 60% of older population was licensed (240,000) • In 2000 80% was licensed (350,000, or 17% of all drivers) • In 2025 if 80% are licensed (500,000, or 24% of all drivers) • In 2025 if 87% are licensed (550,000, or 26.5% of all drivers)
Iowa younger driver trends • Decrease (%) from 1970’s to early 1990’s • 10.7% increase in younger population from 1991-2000 (compared to 4.8 % increase in total population) • In 2000, 157,000 younger drivers were licensed (7.4% of all drivers)
Iowa Y-O driver trends Assuming no increase in percentage of younger drivers … in 2025, as much as 35% of Iowa drivers will be older & younger drivers (compared to ~25% in 2000) In some parts of the state, this is already occurring …
Over 20 percent Older drivers (2000) 53 counties have 20% or higher
Over 10 percent younger drivers (2000) 23 Counties have 10% or higher
Over 1/3 younger and older drivers (2000) 20 Counties Have Older & Younger Drivers > 1/3 of Driving Population
Iowa Y & O crash overrepresentation E = 27029 H =73963 Interpretation: young drivers are 3.9 times as likely to be involved in a 2-veh crash as compared to the “average” driver Ref # 1: 2001 National Household Travel Survey Ref # 2: Iowa Crash Facts 2000 Ref # 3: Iowa DOT crash database
Statewide Interaction of Younger and Older Drivers The unadjusted probability that a driver involved in a 2-vehicle crash will be from a particular age group is the fraction of VMT driven by that age group …
What is expected? Assuming independence (e.g., the fact that an older driver is involved in a crash does not affect the likelihood of the other driver coming from a particular age group), the expected number of 2-veh crashes between age groups is … )*( )* ( e.g., E(Y-O) = 0.047 * 0.093 * 34,264 = 150
Expected 2-veh crashes,Unadjusted Assuming independence, the joint probabilities are …
Statewide Interaction of Younger and Older Drivers • Based only on VMT YO crashes are clearly overrepresented… • however, how much of this is due to the fact that older and younger drivers as groups are each overrepresented???
Statewide Interaction of Younger and Older Drivers The adjusted probability that a driver involved in a 2-vehicle crash will be from a particular age group is …
What is expected? Again, assuming independence … The expected number of 2-veh crashes between age groups is now … )*( )* ( e.g., E(Y-O) = (0.18)*(0.11)*(34,262) = 659
Chi-square is used to make sure differences observed are significant Unadjusted Analysis 41,566 is much larger than the critical value of about 16 for 3 degrees of freedom and 99.9% significance level
Adjusted Analysis 258 is also much larger than the critical value of about 16 for 3 degrees of freedom and 0.001probability of exceeding the critical value
One Passenger • 2 or More Passengers Younger16% More than Older 27% More than All 2-veh Younger 225% More than Older 30% more than all 2-veh
Y-O representation (adjusted) Sample size >= 5 Statewide YO under-representation is 18%
Proximity to High Schools at 1.5 mile distance from high schools: About 72% of all Y-O crashes occur Y-O crashes have the highest percentage of all 2-veh crashes Y-O crashes are 13% higher than all 2-veh crashes
Y-O crashes most likely at intersections Y-O crashes are about: 20%higher than Y-Y crashes 8%higher than O-O crashes 17% higher than M-M crashes
Intersection functional class Comparing Y-O to all 2-veh crashes
Are divided expressways a problem? e.g. 6.83% of all Y-O Crashes occur at intersections of divided roads
Conclusions • Y-O under-represented at statewide level, … why? • Driving in different places and at different times? • Y-O significantly over-represented in some counties • High risk characteristics of Y & O drivers may be most problematic at intersections • After school hours are the most risky time of driving for both age groups
Conclusions (cont.) • Presence of passenger (esp. 2 or more) increases crash risk of younger drivers, but may have a beneficial effect on older drivers • Older drivers experiencing more difficulty at divided expressway intersections than their younger counterparts - Come across younger drivers is the most difficult
Limitations • Lack of local exposure (VMT) data • By age group in Iowa (used US averages) • No Iowa, county, or spatial + time of day exposure data • No knowledge of proportion of drivers in each age group that carry passenger(s)
Recommendations • Limit passengers for younger drivers • Educate older drivers about the benefit of a passenger • Educate older drivers about the risk associated with driving after school hours (they already know to avoid driving in congestion) • Collect more data (or at least a sample) on exposure, time of day, more stratified data (esp. for Y & O)
Future Research • Investigating if particular types of crashes occur more often in Y-O crashes • e.g. rear-end, head-on, left turn, and sideswipe • Investigating the overrepresentation in Y-O crashes in the vicinity of high schools by time of day and distance from high schools • The over-involvement in Y-O crashes by gender • Investigating safety implications of Y-O crashes by roadway functional class • e.g., expressways, county roads, and city streets • Comparing Y-O overrepresentation in rural and urban areas