Exploring truck driver-injury severity at intersections considering heterogeneity in latent classes: A case study of North Carolina

The fatal rate of truck-involved crashes is increasing and crashes become more severe than passenger vehicles in recent years. Much research has been dedicated to exploring the truck crash factors while scarce research focused on the intersection scenarios. This study investigates the factors that a...

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Main Authors: Li Song, Wei (David) Fan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2021-06-01
Series:International Journal of Transportation Science and Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2046043020300836
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author Li Song
Wei (David) Fan
author_facet Li Song
Wei (David) Fan
author_sort Li Song
collection DOAJ
description The fatal rate of truck-involved crashes is increasing and crashes become more severe than passenger vehicles in recent years. Much research has been dedicated to exploring the truck crash factors while scarce research focused on the intersection scenarios. This study investigates the factors that affect the severity level of truck-involved crashes at cross- and T-intersections. Due to the unobserved heterogeneity inherent in crash data, latent class analysis is firstly conducted to divide the crash dataset into relatively homogeneous clusters. Considering the ordinal feature of the severities, general ordered logit models are subsequently developed to further explore the specific factors within each cluster. This study uses the North Carolina’s truck-involved crash at intersection data during 2005 to 2017 from the Highway Safety Information System (HSIS). The estimated parameters and associated marginal effects are combined to interpret the impact of the significant variables within specific clusters. Many factors are found to contribute to the severities, and T-intersection is found to be safer than cross-intersection. For driving behaviors, followed too closely, disregarded signs, disregarded signals, failed to yield, and exceeded speed are found to be top five factors that increase the crash severity at intersections. These results indicate that distraction and speed limits violation always result in severe injury for humans involved in the truck crashes at the intersections. The results of this research provide more reliable analysis for the impact factors of truck-involved crashes at intersections to engineering practitioners and researchers.
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spelling doaj.art-67fbc3d1e6e1455bbe43e9e6041ce7e42023-09-02T10:19:42ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.International Journal of Transportation Science and Technology2046-04302021-06-01102110120Exploring truck driver-injury severity at intersections considering heterogeneity in latent classes: A case study of North CarolinaLi Song0Wei (David) Fan1USDOT Center for Advanced Multimodal Mobility Solutions and Education (CAMMSE), Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC 28223-0001, United StatesCorresponding author.; USDOT Center for Advanced Multimodal Mobility Solutions and Education (CAMMSE), Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC 28223-0001, United StatesThe fatal rate of truck-involved crashes is increasing and crashes become more severe than passenger vehicles in recent years. Much research has been dedicated to exploring the truck crash factors while scarce research focused on the intersection scenarios. This study investigates the factors that affect the severity level of truck-involved crashes at cross- and T-intersections. Due to the unobserved heterogeneity inherent in crash data, latent class analysis is firstly conducted to divide the crash dataset into relatively homogeneous clusters. Considering the ordinal feature of the severities, general ordered logit models are subsequently developed to further explore the specific factors within each cluster. This study uses the North Carolina’s truck-involved crash at intersection data during 2005 to 2017 from the Highway Safety Information System (HSIS). The estimated parameters and associated marginal effects are combined to interpret the impact of the significant variables within specific clusters. Many factors are found to contribute to the severities, and T-intersection is found to be safer than cross-intersection. For driving behaviors, followed too closely, disregarded signs, disregarded signals, failed to yield, and exceeded speed are found to be top five factors that increase the crash severity at intersections. These results indicate that distraction and speed limits violation always result in severe injury for humans involved in the truck crashes at the intersections. The results of this research provide more reliable analysis for the impact factors of truck-involved crashes at intersections to engineering practitioners and researchers.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2046043020300836Truck-involved crashesIntersection, severity analysisLatent class analysisOrdered logit
spellingShingle Li Song
Wei (David) Fan
Exploring truck driver-injury severity at intersections considering heterogeneity in latent classes: A case study of North Carolina
International Journal of Transportation Science and Technology
Truck-involved crashes
Intersection, severity analysis
Latent class analysis
Ordered logit
title Exploring truck driver-injury severity at intersections considering heterogeneity in latent classes: A case study of North Carolina
title_full Exploring truck driver-injury severity at intersections considering heterogeneity in latent classes: A case study of North Carolina
title_fullStr Exploring truck driver-injury severity at intersections considering heterogeneity in latent classes: A case study of North Carolina
title_full_unstemmed Exploring truck driver-injury severity at intersections considering heterogeneity in latent classes: A case study of North Carolina
title_short Exploring truck driver-injury severity at intersections considering heterogeneity in latent classes: A case study of North Carolina
title_sort exploring truck driver injury severity at intersections considering heterogeneity in latent classes a case study of north carolina
topic Truck-involved crashes
Intersection, severity analysis
Latent class analysis
Ordered logit
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2046043020300836
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