Abstract

Frequent lane changes cause serious traffic safety concerns, which involve fatalities and serious injuries. This phenomenon is affected by several significant factors related to road safety. The detection and classification of significant factors affecting lane changing could help reduce frequent lane changing risk. The principal objective of this research is to estimate and prioritize the nominated crucial criteria and sub-criteria based on participants’ answers on a designated questionnaire survey. In doing so, this paper constructs a hierarchical lane-change model based on the concept of the analytic hierarchy process (AHP) with two levels of the most concerning attributes. Accordingly, the fuzzy analytic hierarchy process (FAHP) procedure was applied utilizing fuzzy scale to evaluate precisely the most influential factors affecting lane changing, which will decrease uncertainty in the evaluation process. Based on the final measured weights for level 1, FAHP model estimation results revealed that the most influential variable affecting lane-changing is ‘traffic characteristics’. In contrast, compared to other specified factors, ‘light conditions’ was found to be the least critical factor related to driver lane-change maneuvers. For level 2, the FAHP model results showed ‘traffic volume’ as the most critical factor influencing the lane changes operations, followed by ‘speed’. The objectivity of the model was supported by sensitivity analyses that examined a range for weights’ values and those corresponding to alternative values. Based on the evaluated results, stakeholders can determine strategic policy by considering and placing more emphasis on the highlighted risk factors associated with lane changing to improve road safety. In conclusion, the finding provides the usefulness of the fuzzy analytic hierarchy process to review lane-changing risks for road safety.

Highlights

  • Each year, over 1.35 million people die, and as many as 50 million become injured in traffic accidents worldwide [1]

  • To analyze the important road safety issue comprehensively, the present study has considered the well-acknowledged lane change model designed on the Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP)

  • The final measured weights based on the fuzzy analytic hierarchy process (FAHP) model are very reliable as it provides more consistent outcomes compared to the standard AHP method

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Summary

Introduction

Over 1.35 million people die, and as many as 50 million become injured in traffic accidents worldwide [1]. In 2010, the European Union repeated its intention to develop road safety by placing a mark of decreasing road fatalities by 50% by 2020, followed by a prior mark agreed in 2001 to halve the number of road fatalities by 2010. A new aim was declared by the European Commission on 17 May 2018 to halve road fatalities. The earliest set target to halve the number of severe road traffic injuries is by 2030 compared to 2020 stages [2]. According to the latest available data [3], Hungary recorded an overall rise in the number of road deaths in 2018. 633 persons lost their lives in traffic accidents. This represents an increasing trend in road fatalities as compared to recent years’

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