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Investigating injury severities of motorcycle riders: A two-step method integrating latent class cluster analysis and random parameters logit model.

Authors :
Chang, Fangrong
Xu, Pengpeng
Zhou, Hanchu
Chan, Alan H.S.
Huang, Helai
Source :
Accident Analysis & Prevention. Oct2019, Vol. 131, p316-326. 11p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

• Latent class cluster and random parameters model were integrated to explore factors influencing motorcyclists' injury levels. • Homogeneous clusters help to reveal new information such as important contributing factors hidden in the general model. • Although observations in each cluster are homogeneous in some aspects, heterogeneity was still found in each subgroup. • The proposed model is proved to have great potential for accounting for the source of heterogeneity. Due to the wide existence of heterogeneous nature in traffic safety data, traditional methods used to investigate motorcyclist rider injury severity always lead to masking of some underlying relationships which may be critical for the formulation of efficient safety countermeasures. Instead of applying one single model to the whole dataset or focusing on pre-defined crash types as done in previous studies, the present study proposes a two-step method integrating latent class cluster analysis and random parameters logit model to explore contributing factors influencing the injury levels of motorcyclists. A latent class cluster approach is first used to segment the motorcycle crashes into relatively homogeneous clusters. A mixed logit model is then elaborately developed for each cluster to identify its unique influential factors. The analysis was based on the police-reported crash dataset (2015–2017) of Hunan province, China. The goodness-of-fit indicators and the Receiver Operating Characteristic curves show that the proposed method is more accurate when modeling the riders' injury severities. The heterogeneity found in each homogeneous subgroup supports the application of the random parameters logit model in the study. More importantly, the results demonstrate that segmenting motorcycle crashes into relatively homogeneous clusters as a preliminary step helps to uncover some important influencing factors hidden in the whole-data model. The proposed method is proved to have great potential for accounting for the source of heterogeneity. The injury risk factors identified in specific cases provide more reliable information for traffic engineers and policymakers to improve motorcycle traffic safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00014575
Volume :
131
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Accident Analysis & Prevention
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
137896735
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aap.2019.07.012