Abstract

Given the high incidence of traffic accidents and fatalities on two-wheeled vehicles, there is a growing need for safety management. However, studies on evaluating two-wheeled vehicle driving in a quantitative and comprehensive form are insufficient. In this study, 11 items were defined for the first step to evaluate two-wheeled vehicle driving: signal violation, central line violation, helmet violation, pedestrian close driving, sidewalk driving, reverse lane driving, speed violation, rapid acceleration, rapid deceleration, rapid turn, and rapid lane change. The items were classified into three categories (traffic violation, pedestrian threat, and reckless driving), and their weights were derived using the AHP technique. For rapid acceleration, rapid deceleration, rapid turn, and rapid lane change, a high-performance driving simulator was used to establish risk criteria and calculate the weight based on the degree of risk. The calculated weight of each item indicates its importance in evaluating two-wheeled vehicle driving, with helmet violation (0.158), speed violation (0.124), and pedestrian close driving (0.122) having the highest weights. Finally, the dangerous driving index for two-wheeled vehicles was calculated by the weights of each evaluation item and applied to the driving trajectory data.

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