81 Unfallstatistik
Filtern
Sprache
- Englisch (88) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Conference (84)
- Konferenz (84)
- Accident (57)
- Unfall (56)
- Statistics (37)
- Statistik (37)
- Germany (33)
- Deutschland (32)
- Fatality (31)
- Injury (31)
- Tödlicher Unfall (30)
- Verletzung (29)
- Data acquisition (26)
- Datenerfassung (26)
- Unfallrekonstruktion (26)
- Analyse (math) (23)
- Reconstruction (accid) (23)
- Analysis (math) (22)
- Datenbank (20)
- Schweregrad (Unfall, Verletzung) (20)
- Severity (accid, injury) (20)
- Untersuchung am Unfallort (16)
- Data bank (15)
- On the spot accident investigation (15)
- Cause (14)
- Motorcyclist (14)
- Motorradfahrer (14)
- Schweregrad (Unfall (14)
- Ursache (14)
- Fußgänger (13)
- Pedestrian (13)
- Severity (accid (13)
- Verletzung) (13)
- injury) (13)
- Car (12)
- Fahrzeug (11)
- Accident rate (10)
- Europa (10)
- Europe (10)
- Vehicle (10)
- Accident prevention (9)
- Cyclist (9)
- Radfahrer (9)
- Unfallhäufigkeit (9)
- Unfallverhütung (9)
- Motorcycle (8)
- Motorrad (8)
- PKW (8)
- Safety (8)
- Sicherheit (8)
- Simulation (8)
- Collision (7)
- Driver (7)
- Fahrer (7)
- Geschwindigkeit (7)
- Method (7)
- Risiko (7)
- Verfahren (7)
- Zusammenstoß (7)
- Active safety system (6)
- Insasse (6)
- Speed (6)
- Aktives Sicherheitssystem (5)
- Alte Leute (5)
- Bewertung (5)
- Database (5)
- Evaluation (assessment) (5)
- Old people (5)
- Rear end collision (5)
- Rechenmodell (5)
- Risk (5)
- Vehicle occupant (5)
- Analyse (Math) (4)
- Anfahrversuch (4)
- Auffahrunfall (4)
- Berechnung (4)
- Calculation (4)
- Crash helmet (4)
- Efficiency (4)
- Frontalzusammenstoß (4)
- India (4)
- Indien (4)
- Mathematical model (4)
- Pkw (4)
- Portugal (4)
- Risikobewertung (4)
- Schutzhelm (4)
- Accident reconstruction (3)
- Benutzung (3)
- Child (3)
- Decrease (3)
- Development (3)
- Driver assistance system (3)
- Entwicklung (3)
- Fahranfänger (3)
- Fahrerassistenzsystem (3)
- Head on collision (3)
- Hospital (3)
- Japan (3)
- Kind (3)
- Krankenhaus (3)
- Leistungsfähigkeit (allg) (3)
- Lorry (3)
- Overturning (veh) (3)
- Passive safety system (3)
- Passives Sicherheitssystem (3)
- Recently qualified driver (3)
- Risk assessment (3)
- USA (3)
- United Kingdom (3)
- Use (3)
- Vereinigtes Königreich (3)
- Verminderung (3)
- Überschlagen (3)
- Adolescent (2)
- Australia (2)
- Australien (2)
- Belastung (2)
- Bicycle (2)
- Compatibility (2)
- Czech Republic (2)
- Deformation (2)
- EU (2)
- Eindringung (2)
- Eingabedaten (2)
- Electronic stability program (2)
- Error (2)
- Fahrrad (2)
- Fehler (2)
- Head (2)
- Human factor (2)
- Impact test (2)
- Impact test (veh) (2)
- Improvement (2)
- Information (2)
- Information documentation (2)
- Input data (2)
- International (2)
- Interview (2)
- Jugendlicher (2)
- Junction (2)
- Kleidung (2)
- Knotenpunkt (2)
- Kompatibilität (2)
- Kopf (2)
- Lkw (2)
- Load (2)
- Menschlicher Faktor (2)
- Modification (2)
- Overlapping (2)
- Penetration (2)
- Seitlicher Zusammenstoß (2)
- Side impact (2)
- Software (2)
- Specifications (2)
- Standardisierung (2)
- Theorie (2)
- Theory (2)
- Trend (stat) (2)
- Tschechische Republik (2)
- Verbesserung (2)
- Verformung (2)
- Verkehrsteilnehmer (2)
- Veränderung (2)
- Zeitreihe (stat) (2)
- Überlappung (2)
- Abbiegen (1)
- Abstandsregeltempomat (1)
- Accident severity (1)
- Adaptive cruise controll (1)
- Age (1)
- Air bag (restraint system) (1)
- Airbag (1)
- Alter (1)
- Analyse (1)
- Auffharunfall (1)
- Ausrüstung (1)
- Austria (1)
- Batterie (1)
- Battery (1)
- Bein [menschl] (1)
- Bepflanzung (1)
- Brake (1)
- Braking (1)
- Bremse (1)
- Bremsung (1)
- Bus (1)
- China (1)
- Classification (1)
- Clothing (1)
- Coach (1)
- Coefficient of friction (1)
- Colthing (1)
- Cost (1)
- Cycle track (1)
- Delivery vehicle (1)
- Deutschalnd (1)
- Education (1)
- Eins (1)
- Elektronisches Stabilitätsprogram (1)
- Elektronisches Stabilitätsprogramm (1)
- Equipment (1)
- Erziehung (1)
- Fahrstabilität (1)
- Fahrzeugteil (Sicherheit) (1)
- Fernverkehrsstraße (1)
- Financing (1)
- Finanzierung (1)
- Finite element method (1)
- Forecast (1)
- Forschungsarbeit (1)
- Fracture (bone) (1)
- France (1)
- Frankreich (1)
- Frequency (1)
- Front (1)
- Fuel tank (1)
- Geländefahrzeug (1)
- Geradeausverkehr (1)
- Gesetzesübertretung (1)
- Government (national) (1)
- Griffigkeit (1)
- Harmonisation (1)
- Hazard (1)
- Highway (1)
- Human body (1)
- Häufigkeit (1)
- Impact study (1)
- Jahreszeit (1)
- Klassifizierung (1)
- Knochenbruch (1)
- Korea (Süd) (1)
- Kosten (1)
- Kraftstofftank (1)
- LKW (1)
- Leg (human) (1)
- Leistungsfähigkeit (Allg.) (1)
- Lieferfahrzeug (1)
- Location (1)
- Main road (1)
- Man (1)
- Mann (1)
- Mathematical Model (1)
- Measurement (1)
- Medical aspects (1)
- Medizinische Gesichtspunkte (1)
- Menschlicher Körper (1)
- Messung (1)
- Methode der finiten Elemente (1)
- Mobility (1)
- Mobilität (1)
- Motorisierungsgrad (1)
- Netherlands (1)
- Niederlande (1)
- Norway (1)
- Norwegen (1)
- Nutzwertanalyse (1)
- Oberflächentextur (1)
- Occupant (veh) (1)
- Offence (1)
- On the spot investigation (1)
- One (1)
- Ort (Position) (1)
- Partnerschaft (1)
- Partnership (1)
- Passenger (1)
- Policy (1)
- Politik (1)
- Prevention (1)
- Public transport (1)
- QAccident (1)
- Quality (1)
- Quality assurance (1)
- Qualität (1)
- Qualitätssicherung (1)
- Radweg (1)
- Rail bound transport (1)
- Rail traffic (1)
- Reconstruction [accid] (1)
- Regierung (staat) (1)
- Regression analysis (1)
- Regressionsanalyse (1)
- Reibungsbeiwert (1)
- Reisebus (1)
- Republic of Korea (1)
- Research project (1)
- Residential area (1)
- Richtlinie (1)
- Richtlinien (1)
- Road traffic (1)
- Road transport (1)
- Road user (1)
- Rsk (1)
- Safety belt (1)
- Schienentransport (1)
- Schienenverkehr (1)
- Schweden (1)
- Schweiz (1)
- Schätzung (1)
- Season (1)
- Sicherheitsgurt (1)
- Significance (1)
- Signifikanz (1)
- Skidding resistance (1)
- Speed) (1)
- Spinal column (1)
- Sport utility vehicle (1)
- Standardization (1)
- Steifigkeit (1)
- Stiffness (1)
- Straight ahead (traffic) (1)
- Strasse (1)
- Straßentransport (1)
- Straßenverkehr (1)
- Surface texture (1)
- Switzerland (1)
- Technologie (1)
- Technology (1)
- Test (1)
- Thailand (1)
- Transport operator (1)
- Transportunternehmen (1)
- Traveler (1)
- Turn (1)
- Underride prevention (1)
- Unfallrate (1)
- Unfallrekonsruktion (1)
- Unfallverhütug (1)
- United kingdom (1)
- Unterfahrschutz (1)
- Value analysis (1)
- Variance analysis (1)
- Varianzanalyse (1)
- Vegetation (1)
- Vehicle handling (1)
- Vehicle ownership (1)
- Vehicle safety device (1)
- Veletzung) (1)
- Vereinigtes Königreichl (1)
- Versuch (1)
- Vorn (1)
- Weather (1)
- Wirbelsäule (1)
- Wirksamkeitsuntersuchung (1)
- Witterung (1)
- Wohngebiet (1)
- aktives Sicherheitssystem (1)
- analyses (math) (1)
- ar (1)
- tödlicher Unfall (1)
- Öffentlicher Verkehr (1)
- Österreich (1)
Institut
- Sonstige (85)
- Abteilung Fahrzeugtechnik (2)
- Präsident (2)
Analysis of the accident scenario of powered two-wheelers on the basis of real-world accidents
(2013)
For the first time since 20 years the German national statistics of traffic accidents revealed an increasing number of fatalities and seriously injured persons in 2011. This negative development was especially caused by increasing numbers in all groups of vulnerable road users (VRU). Furthermore, the comparison of fatality reduction rates between several categories of road users shows that persons on motorcycles show the worst performance over years. Although every second fatality in German traffic accidents is still a car occupant, users of PTW make up more than 20% in the meantime. Assuming further improvements in the field of occupant protection this trend will continue. For that reason, a study on the basis of real-world accidents was conducted to describe the accident scenario involving motorcycles and to identify the reasons of the above-described fact. Approximately 1.800 motorcycle accidents out of GIDAS database were used for the analyses. The first part of the study deals with the question how representative the GIDAS database is for the German motorcycle accident scenario. Afterwards, detailed descriptive statistics on motorcycle accidents were presented considering numerous parameters about the accident scene, environmental influences, vehicle information, individual characteristics, interview data, injury severity and injury causation. One important point is the identification of the most frequent critical situations that are typical for motorcycle accidents. Furthermore, a special focus was on accident causation. Finally, conspicuous facts out of the analysis are emphasized. All in all, the study gives a comprehensive overview about the German motorcycle accident scenario. One the one hand, the use of weighted GIDAS data allows representative and robust statements on the basis of large case numbers; on the other hand highly detailed conclusions can be drawn. The results of the study help to understand the particularities of motorcycle accidents and provide approaches for further improvements in the field of PTW safety.
The increasing economics in India has an enormous growth of its road traffic. As observed from official Indian accident statistics the number of road fatalities are one of the highest worldwide. In contrast to most industrialized nations they have an rapidly increasing trend. To come along with this trend it becomes more than essential to understand the traffic accident situation. The official Indian accident statistics gives a glimpse of only basic information. Therefore more detailed data is needed. By using In-depth accident data and officially representative statistics the current accident situation can be evaluated in India, if a suitable weighting methodology is considered. Hence in 2009/2010 a pilot study with the collaboration partner JP-Research India pvt. Ldt. was gathered in Tamil Nadu in south of India. In-depth accident investigations were done around the Coimbatore area on four highways. At first, the collected data is evaluated. Due to consequent and continuous further development based on the first approach a methodology similar to NASS/CDS/GES in the US and GIDAS in Germany was developed. Of course all relevant accident related parameters including pictures and severity information were collected. As a matter of fact based on scaled sketches and reconstruction benefit analyses can be done in order to analyze the accident scenery in India. As a first outcome influence from infrastructure, missing education and vehicle safety were identified as key parameters in order to reduce the number of accidents and casualties. To compare the accident situation against international standards an accident classification for left hand traffic was developed based on the German Insurance classification system. Looking into detail additional accident types were identified and added to create an Indian accident type catalogue. The positive results encouraged several OEMs to participate in this investigation and together with BOSCH a consortium was established in 2010/11. Within one year from beginning in May 2011 about 200 highway accidents were collected, reported and reconstructed using the new standard. Hence a first good overview of the accident situation is available for the Coimbatore Tamil Nadu area. The major target for establishing accident investigations is the extension towards other states of India and urban areas to achieve a better overview of the accident scenery. Therefore local and national authorities have to be embedded in order to strengthen the awareness against traffic safety.
With an ever rising human life expectancy the share of elderly people in society is constantly rising. This leads to the fact that at the same rate the share of people with age related diseases such as dementia and poor eyesight taking part in traffic will rise and therefore traffic accidents caused by this group of people due to the disease will play an ever greater role. This Situation will be among the future challenges of road safety work. At present this study displays specific characteristics of accidents caused by elderly car drivers (aged 65 or higher) based on the analysis of the German In-Depth Accident Study GIDAS. Herein almost 1000 elderly car drivers were identified as accident participants in the years 2008 to 2011. The focus of this study lies on identifying special types of accidents which are caused by elderly drivers and on characterizing these types with the information gathered on scene and by interviewing the participants. The main evidence analyzed is the knowledge about the accident locality, the trajectories of the participants as well as the reasons for the occurrence of the accidents. Furthermore personal information such as the personal condition before the accident and driving purposes is used to identify patterns of contributing circumstances for accidents caused by elderly traffic participants.
There is a need to continue to set the right vehicle safety policy priorities in the future. Research has to point out the most cost efficient and safety relevant measures to further reduce the number of road traffic casualties. The overall development shows that the constant and rapid decrease in the number of road casualties slows down. New innovations need to enter the vehicle market soon, in order to continue the success achieved in the last decade. Priorities for vehicle safety are driven by safety and mobility demands. It is necessary to keep a strong lid on all aspects of elderly and vulnerable road users. The fraction of powered-two-wheelers (PTW) is a priority group. PTWs have a risk of being involved in an accident, 14times higher than that of a passenger car. However, the figures do also show that every second fatality is a car occupant. Therefore passenger car safety remains to be top priority. Heavy goods vehicles are overly represented in fatal accidents, addressing the need to make these vehicles more compatible with other road users. These facts highlight the necessity not only to increase vehicles" self protection, but also to make cars - and trucks - more compatible and safe. Cycling is a strongly increasing mode of transport. This is a further reason to demand better protection for cyclists and pedestrians from car design and car active and integrated safety systems. Another priority for future vehicle safety is related to demographics. It is less known that the purely demographic effect will be superimposed by an increasing wish of elderly people to be mobile. However, elderly people show deficits concerning their biomechanics. This emphasizes the need for better and more adaptive restraint systems, but also further technological challenges and demands for active safety systems. However, in order to progress, current technological limitations have to be overcome. Cost benefit considerations, but also consumer acceptance and desires, will drive this process.
Since 2008, the authors inspected fatal traffic accidents on the spot every year, with the cooperation of Toyota police station in Aichi pref. In the jurisdiction, numbers of fatal accidents were 18 in 2008, 12 in 2009, 14 accidents in 2010, and 16 in 2011. We here report the results of our analysis of information obtained by detailed inspection for those that occurred from 2008 to 2010. We focused on vehicle-to-pedestrian accidents, which accounted for about 45% of all accidents in 2008. Because many accidents occurred on residential roads not far from pedestrians" homes, it was revealed that the decrease of the collision speed by traffic calming such as humps and zone speed management, was highly effective. On the other hand, pedestrian detection technologies seemed to be also effective as a countermeasure on vehicle side. Every pedestrian position against a vehicle was clarified and TTC (Time to Collision) was calculated provisionally. Pedestrian accidents in intersections were also examined. Among the intersection pedestrian accidents within the jurisdiction, compared with the national average in Japan, the ratio of intersections without a signal and the ratio without a pedestrian crossing were high. According to the comparison of the Japanese traffic accident patterns between 2001 and 2008, pedestrian accidents during turning right and turning left did not decrease much. For elderly drivers, these accidents occurred very often. Finally, single vehicle accidents were analysed with the accident pattern analysis methods used above. There were high numbers of single vehicle accidents against object on single roads. Although fatal accidents against guardrails decreased, the numbers of fatal accidents against a utility pole and a sign pole were nearly constant. As for the impact with narrow width objects such as utility poles, the fatality rate was very high, and countermeasures of both road infrastructure and vehicles seem to be effective.
The number of road accidents in Portugal has decreased significantly in the last decades, however, this tendency is not similar in all types of transportation. In the most recent years and by European standards, Portugal is still one of the leading countries concerning the number of fatalities in Powered Two Wheelers (PTW) accidents. To this effect, the in-depth investigation of PTW accidents is crucial and so, a thorough statistical analysis concerning the main factors influencing PTW riders injury severity accidents was undertaken regarding the 2007-2010 period in the National Road Safety Authority (ANSR) injured riders database using the software SPSS. In addition, to determine the importance of absent factors in the database analysis, such as velocity, a set of 53 real accidents involving PTW were also investigated and computationally reconstructed using the software PC-Crash. Lateral collisions between a motorcycle, its rider and the side of three different passenger cars were also simulated, varying the motorcycle impact angle and velocity in order to estimate the PTW deformation energy and the rider- injuries, as this accident configuration stands out in terms of frequency and even severity. The results of this detailed study are presented.
It is very important for Automotive OEMs to get feedback on their product performance on real roads for continuous improvement. Every OEM has a way of collecting this feedback for various performance parameters. Systematic accident research is a way to generate the information related to safety performance of the vehicle. In India, while there is a large amount of data related to the accidents, it is found this data is aimed at understanding the gross statistics and not directly useful for technology development. This paper explains learnings from a pilot study carried out in collaboration with an Emergency Medical Services provider on one of the expressways (motorways). This pilot study has resulted in development of working model that could now be scaled up at for wider application. The paper also presents some of the important observations based on the data collected.
Introduction: Spine injuries pose a considerable risk to life and quality of life. The total number of road deaths in developed countries has markedly decreased, e.g. in Germany from over 20000 in 1970 to less than 4000 in 2010, but little is known how this is reflected in the burden of spine fractures of motor vehicle users. In this study, we aimed to show the actual incidence of spine injuries among drivers and front passengers and elucidate possible dependencies between crash mechanisms and types of injuries.
Supervision of the safety performance in public transport is one of the main tasks of the Federal Office of Transport (FOT) in Switzerland. Recently a three level system of safety indicators has been defined to cover all means of Swiss public transport. The safety indicators are fed by the FOT incident database since the year 2000. In cooperation with the Institute for Traffic Safety and Automation Engineering (iVA) at TU Braunschweig, Germany, FOT is developing a suitable methodology for the definition and evaluation of the safety targets in Swiss public transport. The methodology is applied for evaluation of safety indicators on a country level and for single transport companies. In a new approach the abovementioned methodology is applied to car incident data to develop an indicator based cross-modal safety measure.
Police records about traffic accidents like used by IRTAD (International Road Traffic and Accident Database) and CARE (Community Road Accident Database) do not represent all road injuries. For instance, road accidents of bicyclists without a counterpart are usually not reported. Furthermore, IRTAD-like data contains hardly any information on injury outcome and accident circumstances. This information gap leads to an under-representation of the safety concerns of the most vulnerable road users like children and the elderly both in accident research and safety promotion. Injury registration for the European Injury Database (IDB), in turn, combines details of accident causation with diagnostic information that can be used to assess injury severity and long term consequences. The IDB is collecting data from hospital emergency department patients and is being implemented in a growing number of countries. In this article IDB results on mode of transport and injury outcome are presented from a sample of nine EU member states.
While it is important to track trends in the number of road accidents in different countries using national statistics, there is a need for data with more detailed information, so called in-depth accident data. For this reason, several accident data projects emerged worldwide in recent years. However, also different data standards were established and so comparative analysis of international in-depth data has been very hard to conduct, so far. This is why the project iGLAD (Initiative for the Global Harmonization of Accident Data) was established and created the prerequisites for building up a standardized dataset out of the common denominator of different in-depth accident databases from Europe, USA and Asia. In the first phase, the project received funding from ACEA to compile an initial database. To accomplish this, a suitable data scheme has been defined, a pilot study has been conducted as proof of concept and the recoding of the first common data base has been initiated. Also, to prepare the project for its self-supporting continuation in the next years, a business model has been developed. This paper reports the history and status of the project, the current challenges and the creation of a capable consortium to maintain the data. In mid-2014, the initial database containing 1550 cases from 10 different countries will be completed and a first detailed view on this data will be possible.
India is one of the leading countries reporting highest road accidents & related injuries. TMARG (Tata Motors Accident Research Group) has been recording crashes in association with M/s. Lokamanya Medical Foundation since 2011 with M/s, Amandeep Hospitals since Aug 2013. This study has highlighted some accident types not discussed extensively in literature. Trucks to Truck impacts " Cabin interaction with overhanging loadbody structures and Offset underside impacts for passenger vehicles are seen in significant numbers. The paper discusses these in more detail including severity.
The declining trend since 1991 in the number of killed people was broken in 2011 when overall 4 009 people died in traffic accidents in Germany. The question arises if there is a stagnating trend of fatalities in Germany in future? By breaking down the accidents with casualties towards a monthly view one can see a decreasing trend of fatalities in the warmer months especially since 2009. When comparing against winter months higher deviations are observed. In December 2011 an increase of 191 traffic deaths were registered (181 in 2010 compared to 372 in 2011). Further analyses of different accident influences were evaluated and their possibility of drastic change from one year to the other was determined. As seen weather- and environmental conditions are one of the major contributing factors and are one of the causes for the increased number of fatalities. To support the underlying assumption a model had been created to calculate the number of traffic deaths on a daily basis approach. As an input, road conditions projected through weather parameters and also different driving behaviors on weekdays or holidays were used. As a result, estimates of daily fatality with up to 75% precision can be achieved out of the 2009, 2010 and 2011 data. Further on it shows that weather and street conditions have a high influence on the overall resulting number of traffic accidents with casualties, and especially to the number of fatalities. Hence it is estimated that approximately 3 300 people were killed in traffic accidents in Germany in 2013 which would be again a reduction of another 13% compared to 2012. Therefore an answer to the question will be that the decreasing trend in traffic fatalities in Germany somehow is not broken when environmental conditions are included in national statistics. Their effects will become more visible in future accident statistics and it is estimated variances of 5% to 8% of the annual number of traffic fatalities in Germany will be seen.
The paper gives an overview of the recent (mostly 2012) figures of killed bus/coach occupants (drivers and passengers) in 27 Member States of the European Union as reported by CARE. The Evolution of the figures of bus/coach occupants killed in road accidents urban, rural without motorway and on motorways from 1991 to 2010 in 15 Member States of the EU supplements this information. More detailed are the figures reported for Germany by the Federal Statistics. The paper displays long-term evaluations (1957 to 2012) for killed, seriously and slightly injured occupants in all kinds of buses/coaches. Midterm evaluations (1995 to 2012) of the figures of fatalities and casualties are displayed for different busses according to their identification of road using as coaches, urban buses, school buses, trolley buses and "other buses". To be able to compare the evolutions of the safety of vehicle occupants it is customary to use different risk indicators. Calculations and illustrations for three often used indicators with their development over time are given: fatalities, seriously injured and slightly injured per 100,000 vehicles registered, per 1 billion (109) vehicle-kilometres travelled and per 1 billion (109) person-kilometres. These indicators are shown for occupants of cars, goods vehicles and buses/coaches. For the period from 1957 until 2012 it is obvious, that for all three vehicle categories analysed there was a clear long-term trend towards more occupant safety in terms of casualties per vehicles registered and per vehicle mileage. This was most significant for car occupants but it can be seen for bus/coach occupants and goodsvehicle occupants as well. Figures of killed occupants and of casualties related to person-kilometres are calculated and displayed for the shorter period 1995 to 2012. Here it becomes obvious that the bus/coach is still the safest mode of transport for the occupants of road vehicles. Graphs for the casualty risk indices still show significantly higher risks for car occupants despite the corresponding curve moved sustainable downwards. It is remarkable, that the risks of being killed or injured for the occupants of urban buses is growing whereas the corresponding risk for the occupants of coaches in line traffic tends downwards. The article ends with a short comparison and discussion of the risk indicators which are actually published for the occupants (driver and passengers) of cars and the passengers of buses/coaches, railroads, trams and airplanes. The interpretation of such information depends on the perception and it seems that for a complete view not only one indicator should be used and the evolutions of the indicator values during longer periods (as displayed with examples in the paper) should also be taken into account.
Although the annual traffic accident statistics published by the national police is available in public, the detailed traffic accident data has not been released in Korea. Recently the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport recognized the importance of in-depth accident data to enhance road traffic safety and initiated a research project to establish a collection of the detailed accident data. The main objective of the project is a feasibility study to establish KIDAS (Korea In-Depth Accident Study). Within this project, three university hospitals which are located in mid-size cities have been selected to collect accident data. Annually, more than 500 cases of accidents have been collected from the in-patient's interviews and diagnosis. Unlike GIDAS (German In-Depth Accident Study), currently on-site investigation can"t be performed by the Korean police. The only available data is patient medical records, patient's description of accident circumstances and the damaged vehicle. Occasionally the police provide the accident investigation reports containing very brief information on accident causation and vehicle safety. In a first step, the concept of KIDAS is to adopt the format of iGLAD (Initiative for the Global Harmonization of Accident Data) for harmonization. Since the currently collected accident information is extremely limited compared with GIDAS, the other sources of data and calculations such as KNCAP vehicle data, pc-crash simulations, vehicle registration information, insurance company data are utilized to complete the iGLAD template. Results from KIDAS_iGLAD and the cases of assessment of active safety devices such as AEBS, ESC, and LDWS will be evaluated.
Enhanced protection of pedestrians and cyclists remains on the focus. Besides infrastructural and behavioral aspects it is necessary to exploit technical solutions placed on motorized vehicles. Accident research needs reliable data as well as national road accident statistics. Changing the view on seriously injured road users is one of the challenges which will substantially contribute to the optimization on future traffic safety. The missing accuracy in the definition of personal injury has a detrimental effect on making cost efficient road safety policy which is not only focused on fatal accidents. The European commission requested that, starting in 2015, all EU member states provide more detailed data on the injury status of road casualties, with special regard to the group of seriously injured. Conventional accident data will always be essential. But to obtain detailed data about driver behavior in real traffic situations further data sources are required. These could be EDR data, data from electronic control units, data from traffic surveys and traffic counting, naturalistic diving studies and field operational tests. Gaining insight into normal as well as critical driver behavior will enable accident researchers to deduct functions estimating the increase or decrease of accident risk associated with certain behaviors or vehicle functions. Also with view to the introduction of highly automated driving functions in the future such data is urgently needed. Computer simulation based tools to estimate the benefits of active safety systems are another step on the way towards the safety assessment of automated driving. It is now the duty of the scientific community to ask the right questions, to develop a methodology and to merge all these data sources into a common framework for the assessment of future traffic safety innovations.
Car occupants have a high level of mortality in road accidents, since passenger cars are the prevalent mode of transport. In 2013, car occupant fatalities accounted for 45% of all road accident fatalities in the EU. The objective of this research is the analysis of basic road safety parameters related to car occupants in the European countries over a period of 10 years (2004-2013), through the exploitation of the EU CARE database with disaggregate data on road accidents. Data from the EU Injury Database for the period 2005 - 2008 are used to identify injury patterns, and additional insight into accident causation for car occupants is offered through the use of in-depth accident data from the EC SafetyNet project Accident Causation System (SNACS). The results of the analysis allow for a better understanding of the car occupants' safety situation in Europe, thus providing useful support to decision makers working for the improvement of road safety level in Europe.