Nicola Hewett, Lee Fawcett, Andrew Golightly, Neil Thorpe
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引用次数: 0
摘要
改善道路安全极为重要,因为全球道路上的死亡人数仍然高得令人无法接受;据估计,每年有 130 万人死于道路交通碰撞事故。目前处理碰撞热点的做法几乎总是被动的:一旦在某个预先确定的观察期内碰撞次数超过了临界值,就会采取相应的处理措施(如道路安全摄像机)。交通碰撞很少发生,因此有必要延长观察期。然而,交通冲突较为频繁,是社会成本的一个边际;因此,交通冲突前后的研究可以在较短的时间段内进行。我们在美国北部的一个城市调查了在信号灯控制的交叉路口实施领先行人间隔处理作为安全干预措施的效果。在实施前后,我们分别从实施地点和对照地点收集了行人与车辆交通冲突的数据。我们对蚕食后时间(PET)进行了前后研究,其中较小的 PET 值表示 "近乎失误"。因此,我们采用极值理论对 PET 过程的极值进行建模,并对通常的建模框架进行调整,以考虑时间依赖性和处理效果。
Using extreme value theory to evaluate the leading pedestrian interval road safety intervention
Improving road safety is hugely important with the number of deaths on the world's roads remaining unacceptably high; an estimated 1.3 million people die each year as a result of road traffic collisions. Current practice for treating collision hotspots is almost always reactive: once a threshold level of collisions has been overtopped during some pre‐determined observation period, treatment is applied (e.g., road safety cameras). Traffic collisions are rare, so prolonged observation periods are necessary. However, traffic conflicts are more frequent and are a margin of the social cost; hence, traffic conflict before/after studies can be conducted over shorter time periods. We investigate the effect of implementing the leading pedestrian interval treatment at signalised intersections as a safety intervention in a city in north America. Pedestrian‐vehicle traffic conflict data were collected from treatment and control sites during the before and after periods. We implement a before/after study on post‐encroachment times (PETs) where small PET values denote ‘near‐misses’. Hence, extreme value theory is employed to model extremes of our PET processes, with adjustments to the usual modelling framework to account for temporal dependence and treatment effects.