Abstract

This study explores the temporal instability and non-transferability of the determinants affecting injury severities of pedestrians struck by motorcycles and non-motorcycles. Using the pedestrian-vehicle crash data in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, over three years (2017–2019), three possible crash injury severity categories (minor injury, severe injury, and fatal injury) are estimated using alternative models to account for unobserved heterogeneity. These are a random-parameters multinomial logit (RP-ML) model with heterogeneity in means and variances and a latent-class multinomial logit (LC-ML) model with class probability functions. Temporal instability and non-transferability in the effects of explanatory variables are confirmed using a series of likelihood ratio tests based on the two alternative models. Various variables are observed to determine pedestrian-injury severities, and the estimation results show significant temporal instability and non-transferability in both RP-ML and LC-ML models. However, several explanatory variables produce relatively temporally stable and transferable effects, providing valuable insights to implement effective countermeasures from a long-term perspective. Moreover, out-of-sample predictions are simulated to confirm the temporal instability and non-transferability. At the same time, the LC-ML models produce higher differences for temporal instability and lower differences for non-transferability compared to the RP-ML model. Understanding and depth comparing the estimation results, likelihood ratio tests, and out-of-sample predictions using alternative models is a promising direction for future research to explore how the observed and unobserved heterogeneity can be estimated in terms of temporal instability and non-transferability.

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