Abstract

Roadside collisions are a significant problem faced by all countries. Urbanisation has led to an increase in traffic congestion and roadside vehicle collisions. According to the UK Government’s Department for Transport, most vehicle collisions occur on urban roads, with empirical evidence showing drivers are more likely to break local and fixed speed limits in urban environments. Analysis conducted by the Department for Transport found that the UK’s accident prevention measure’s cost is estimated to be £33bn per year. Therefore, there is a strong motivation to investigate the causes of roadside collisions in urban environments to better prepare traffic management, support local council policies, and ultimately reduce collision rates. This study utilises agent-based modelling as a tool to plan, experiment and investigate the relationship between speeding and vehicle density with collisions. The study found that higher traffic density results in more vehicles travelling at a slower speed, regardless of the degree to which drivers comply with speed restrictions. Secondly, collisions increase linearly as speed compliance is reduced for all densities. Collisions are lowest when all vehicles comply with speed limits for all densities. Lastly, higher global traffic densities result in higher local traffic densities near-collision sites across all adherence levels, increasing the likelihood of congestion around these sites. This work, when extended to real-world applications using empirical data, can support effective road safety policies.

Highlights

  • A lack of adherence to speed limits can have serious consequences and pose a significant risk to life for drivers, passengers and members of the public

  • This study aims to quantify the relationship between speed limit adherence within different population sizes and the subsequent impact on collisions

  • Low, mid and full adherence to speed limits will be compared across low, mid and high traffic density; these are identified as the independent variables, while the dependent variable is the number of collisions

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Summary

Introduction

A lack of adherence to speed limits can have serious consequences and pose a significant risk to life for drivers, passengers and members of the public. Government reports, car users account for the largest proportion of casualties across all categories of injury. A total of 736 car passengers/drivers suffered fatal collisions in 2019 [1,2]. On 30 mph (miles per hour) roads, 54% of cars exceeded the speed limit in the first quarter of 2019. 6% of these cars exceeded the speed limit by over. This increased in the second quarter of 2019 to 56%. 37% of fatalities among car passengers/drivers in 2019 occurred on urban roads—an increase of 1% since

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