4.6 Article

Bicyclist injury severity in traffic crashes: A spatial approach for geo-referenced crash data to uncover non-stationary correlates

Journal

JOURNAL OF SAFETY RESEARCH
Volume 73, Issue -, Pages 25-35

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsr.2020.02.006

Keywords

Bicycle-motor-vehicle crash; Bicyclist injury severity; Non-stationarity; Geographically weighted ordinal logistic regression

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Introduction: Bicyclists are among vulnerable road users with their safety a key concern. This study generates new knowledge about their safety by applying a spatial modeling approach to uncover non-stationary correlates of bicyclist injury severity in traffic crashes. Method: The approach is Geographically Weighted Ordinal Logistic Regression (GWOLR), extended from the regular Ordered Logistic Regression (OLR) by incorporating the spatial perspective of traffic crashes. The GWOLR modeling approach allows the relationships between injury severity and its contributing factors to vary across the spatial domain, to account for the spatial heterogeneity. This approach makes use of geo-referenced data. This study explored more than 7,000 geo-referenced bicycle--motor-vehicle crashes in North Carolina. Results: This study performed a series of non-stationarity tests to identify local relationships that vary substantially across the spatial domain. These local relationships are related to the bicyclist (bicyclist age, bicyclist behavior, bicyclist intoxication, bicycle direction, bicycle position), motorist (driver age, driver intoxication, driver behavior, vehicle speed, vehicle type) and traffic (traffic volume). Conclusions: Results from the regular OLR are in general consistent with previous findings. For example, an increased bicyclist injury severity is associated with older bicyclists, bicyclist being intoxicated, and higher motorvehicle speeds. Results from the GWOLR show local (rather than global) relationships between contributing factors and bicyclist injury severity. (C) 2020 National Safety Council and Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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