A paper titled “
Modelling the effect of traffic regimes on safety of urban arterials: the case study of Athens” authored by
Athanasios Theofilatos,
George Yannis,
John Golias and
Eleni Vlahogianni is
now published in
Journal of Traffic and Transportation Engineering.
To achieve the aims of the study, traffic and accident data
during the period 2006–2011 from two major arterials in Athens were
collected and processed. Firstly, a finite
mixture cluster analysis was implemented to classify traffic
into clusters. Afterwards, discriminant analysis was carried out in
order to correctly assign new cases to
the existing regimes by using a training and a testing set.
Lastly, Bayesian logistic regression models were developed to
investigate the impact of traffic regimes on
accident likelihood and severity. The findings of this study
suggest that urban traffic can be divided into different regimes by
using average traffic occupancy and its
standard deviation, measured by nearby upstream and
downstream loop detectors. The results revealed potential specific
hazardous traffic conditions. In general, high occupancy
values increase accident likelihood, but tend to lead slight
accidents, while
PTWs are more likely to be involved in an accident, when traffic occupancy is high.
Transitions from high to low occupancy also increase
accident likelihood.
Πηγή: Ε.Μ.Π
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