Abstract

Traffic safety analysis relies heavily on the comprehensiveness of traffic crash data. However, crash occurrences are rare events. Researchers have sought alternative measures closely linked to crash occurrences, known as surrogate safety measures, to address this challenge. The advent of vehicle telematics has introduced a valuable source of data, consisting of time-stamped positional information of vehicles, facilitated through telecommunication networks. Wejo Data Services Inc. collects vehicle telematics data through collaboration with various automotive original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) to furnish connected vehicle data along with driver event variables, such as braking and acceleration. This study seeks to investigate the relationship between hard-braking events and the incidence of total crashes and peak period crashes across different facility types using analysis of variance and negative binomial models. The results show a strong correlation between hard braking and crash frequency. The ratio of hard-braking events to crashes exhibits notable variations across peak hours, off-peak periods, and nighttime. Further, the coefficient of hard braking is significantly higher on freeways compared with non-freeways. The model performance of different short period models improved better than the extent of improvement in total crash model after hard braking was introduced as an explanatory variable. The marginal effects of hard braking on crash frequency on freeways are consistently higher than those in non-freeway segments.

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