Abstract

Pedestrian mobility has become an increasingly important concern in transportation system analysis because of its positive impacts on the environment and healthy lifestyles. However, pedestrian safety in a vehicle-dominated transportation network remains a concern and potential barrier to pedestrian mobility, with pedestrian intersection safety being of particular concern. In addition, it is important to understand how pedestrian safety has been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, perhaps permanently shifting pedestrian injury risks. This research seeks to provide insight into how pedestrian injury risks at intersections have changed as a result of the pandemic by estimating a series pedestrian injury severity models. To do so, unconstrained and partially constrained random parameters multinomial logit models with heterogeneity in the means of random parameters were estimated. Using Florida data, two one-year periods (one year before and one year after the COVID-19 pandemic) were defined based on vehicle miles traveled. The sample includes 3,780 single pedestrian-single vehicle crashes (2,348 from daytime and 1,432 from nighttime). A broad range of variables was considered to assess how the parameters may have shifted between the before and after periods. A series of likelihood ratio tests were conducted to examine the stability of model parameter estimates across the predefined time periods as well as to determine the differences between the daytime and nighttime crash injury severity outcomes. The results show that the nighttime crashes experienced more temporal shifts relative to daytime crashes. The findings also showed that both pedestrian and driver behavior played key temporally-shifting roles before and after the COVID-19 pandemic period. Finally, the out-of-sample simulations suggest that pedestrian injuries have become more severe after the pandemic.

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