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An Exploratory Analysis of Large Truck Crashes in the US . Shashi Nambisan Institute for Transportation Iowa State University Murat Ozen Middle East Technical University Department of Civil Engineering Mid-Continent Transportation Research Symposium Ames, I A August 15, 2013.
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An Exploratory Analysis of Large Truck Crashes in the US Shashi Nambisan Institute for Transportation Iowa State University Murat Ozen Middle East Technical University Department of Civil Engineering Mid-Continent Transportation Research Symposium Ames, IA August 15, 2013
Introduction • Truck operations: Key for trade & commerce • Disproportionate share of fatal crashes • Safety analysis: Macro-level; Fatal crash rates • Outcomes: Number and type of crashes • Exposure measures: #Trucks, Travel, Type & Extent of Roads • Analyses of truck safety records: 2000 to 2010 • Definitions of trucks before and after 2007 (US DOT) • Fatal truck crash analysis • Spatial considerations • Temporal considerations
Methodology • Large truck fatal crash rates per 100 million VKT • Annual rates • At national level • At regional level for the US DOT’s 10 federal regions • Descriptive analyses • Statistical tests
Data Sources • US DOT • Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) • Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) • Large trucks = Gross vehicle weight rating or gross combination weight rating of more than 4.5 tons • National level fatal crash and truck Vehicle Kilometer of Travel (VKT) data available for the study period • State level truck VKT data available only 2009, 2010 • Average % of national VKT for each state in 2009, 2010 • Apply to national VKT for the years 2000 to 2008
National Level Trends • % registered trucks in national vehicle fleet increasedfrom 3.5% in 2006 to 4.2% in 2007 • Truck VKT increased 36.7% in 2007 as compared to 2006 • Truck fatal crash rate per 100 million vehicle kilometers traveled by large trucks decreased from 1.21 to 0.86 MIDDLE EAST TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY
Check Data for Normality • Shapiro-Wilknormality test for normality assumption • Ho: The data are normally distributed • H1: The data are not normally distributed Shapiro-Wilk Normality Tests Results For National Level Fatal Truck Crash Data • Need to use non-parametric statistical methods
Non-Parametric Tests • Wilcoxon Rank-Sum test and Mann-Whitney U test • to test the null hypothesis that two populations are the same • Kruskall-Wallis H test • to test the null hypothesis that more than two populations are the same
Urban vs. Rural • Are the Urban & Rural fatal truck crash rates the same before and after 2007? • Before 2007 (i.e. Averagerural= 1.63 > Averageurban= 0.84) • After 2007 (i.e. Averagerural= 0.94 > Averageurban= 0.52) • Ho: Urban and rural fatal truck crash rates are the same • H1: Urban and rural fatal truck crash rates are NOT the same Reject WR-S test Ho if ts < L or ts > U Reject M-W U test Ho if absolute value of z > zC • Rural fatal truck crash rates are higher than urban fatal truck crash rates
Roadway Types • Compare fatal truck crash rates for interstate highways, other arterials and other highways before and after 2007 • Interstate highways have lower fatal crash rates than other types of roadways. • Are the differences in fatal crash rates on interstatesand other arterials and other arterials and other highwaysstatistically significant?
Roadway Type Comparisons • Ho: Fatal truck crash rates are the same for interstate highways, other arterials and other highways • H1: Fatal truck crash rates are NOT the same for interstate highways, other arterials and other highways Reject K-W H test Ho if H > Hcritical
Regional Trends: Before 2007 • Fatal crash rate in Region 4 is the highest • Fatal crash rate in Region 10 is the is lowest • Fatal crash rates in Region 3, Region 8 and Region 10 seem to be lower than the others
Regional Trends: After 2007 • Fatal crash rate in Region 4 is the highest • Fatal crash rate in Region 10 is the is lowest • Variations in the fatal truck crash rates across the regions are not pronounced
Regional Comparisons: Pairwise • Fatal truck crash rates are not the same for different regions before and after 2007 based on pairwise comparisons. • Ho: Fatal truck crash rates are the same for each region • H1: Fatal truck crash rates are NOT the same for each region Reject K-W H test Ho if H > Hcritical
State Level Analyses • Comparison of state level fatal truck crash rates across the statesbefore and after 2007 • Ho: Fatal truck crash rates are the same across the states • H1: Fatal truck crash rates are NOT the same across the states Reject K-W H test Ho if H > Hcritical
Summary • Illustrated methods to analyze truck safety • Non-parametric techniques • Variations in fatal truck crash rates • Before and after 2007 • Urban vs rural • Across roadway types • Across federal regions • Across states • Northwest US vs Southeast US • Limitations • Focused only on fatal truck crash rates • Need to evaluate other factors / metrics
Implications • Spatial and temporal variations in truck safety records warrant further study • Changes in truck definitions affected estimated crash rates • Use caution when comparing Pre-2007 and Post -2007 data • Method can be adapted for safety analyses in other contexts • Support policy making • Planning • Design • Operations • Law enforcement strategies • Resource allocation • Others
Contact Information Shashi Nambisan, Ph.D., P.E. Professor of Civil Engineering Institute for Transportation Iowa State University Ames, IA 50011 shashi@iastate.edu Murat Ozen, Ph.D. Candidate Middle East Technical University Department of Civil Engineering 06800, Ankara - TURKEY mozen@metu.edu.tr