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Analysis of the injury severity of crashes by considering different lighting conditions on two-lane rural roads
Institution:1. Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation, Maine Medical Center, Portland, ME, USA;2. Department of Surgery, Maine Medical Center, Portland, ME, USA;1. Lyles School of Civil Engineering, Purdue University, 550 Stadium Mall, West Lafayette, IN 47907-2051, USA;2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of South Florida, 4202 E Fowler Avenue, ENC 3300, Tampa, FL 33620, USA;1. Department of Civil Engineering, University of South Alabama, 150 Jaguar Drive, Shelby Hall, Suite 3142, Mobile, AL 36688, United States;2. Department of Civil, Construction & Environmental Engineering, University of Alabama, Room 213C Shelby Hall, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487, United States
Abstract:IntroductionMany studies have examined different factors contributing to the injury severity of crashes; however, relatively few studies have focused on the crashes by considering the specific effects of lighting conditions. This research investigates lighting condition differences in the injury severity of crashes using 3-year (2009–2011) crash data of two-lane rural roads of the state of Washington.MethodSeparate ordered-probit models were developed to predict the effects of a set of factors expected to influence injury severity in three lighting conditions; daylight, dark, and dark with street lights. A series of likelihood ratio tests were conducted to determine if these lighting condition models were justified.ResultsThe modeling results suggest that injury severity in specific lighting conditions are associated with contributing factors in different ways, and that such differences cannot be uncovered by focusing merely on one aggregate model. Key differences include crash location, speed limit, shoulder width, driver action, and three collision types (head-on, rear-end, and right-side impact collisions).Practical ApplicationsThis paper highlights the importance of deploying street lights at and near intersections (or access points) on two-lane rural roads because injury severity highly increases when crashes occur at these points in dark conditions.
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