Abstract

Evaluating safety performance of first-class highways in China is important due to their high mortality rates. Traditional models for statistical crash prediction and traffic conflict techniques require long periods of data collection which is time-consuming and labor-intensive. This paper introduces a safety evaluation method based on catastrophe theory for highways in China. The method firstly divides the highway into multiple road sections and uses video-based road detection (VRD) system to collect video data of existing road conditions. Then, experienced drivers and experts are invited to watch the collected videos to establish a multilayer safety index system and assign values to bottom indexes. By applying catastrophe theory, a general safety index is derived, which indicates the relative safety level of a road section. Finally, all road sections can be ranked based on the general safety index. A case study shows encouraging results where (1) the safety index is highly correlated with real mortality rates and (2) the safety index successfully identifies most dangerous road sections. The proposed method can be considered as a promising supplementary safety evaluation method that could help traffic engineers to better understand safety implications of first-class highways in China.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe mortality rates (deaths per 100 km per year) of highways are unevenly distributed in China

  • The mortality rates of highways are unevenly distributed in China

  • Understand the overall safety of the entire highway Understand the safety of road sections and identify dangerous road sections for further in-depth analysis Find out safety issues of the specific locations/traffic facilities and provide countermeasures

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Summary

Introduction

The mortality rates (deaths per 100 km per year) of highways are unevenly distributed in China. First-class highways that only account for 1.79% of the total highway mileage have the highest mortality rate (36.16 deaths per 100 km per year), followed by second-class highways (16.18 deaths per 100 km per year) and expressways (15.53 deaths per 100 km per year). First-class highways can be considered as the most dangerous roadway type in China, which certainly deserves careful safety evaluations. Safety evaluations can help to develop effective safety countermeasures to lower crash rates and reduce crash severity. This paper will be focused on the mesolevel safety evaluations on first-class highways in China at the operation stage

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