pedestrian impact
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
William T. Neale ◽  
David Danaher ◽  
Andrew Donaldson ◽  
Tegan Smith

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Casey Costa ◽  
Jazmine Aira ◽  
Bharath Koya ◽  
William Decker ◽  
Joel Sink ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 147 ◽  
pp. 105761
Author(s):  
Taewung Kim ◽  
Gerald Poplin ◽  
Varun Bollapragada ◽  
Tom Daniel ◽  
Jeff Crandall

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-19
Author(s):  
Chengcheng Yang ◽  
Jiawen Wang ◽  
Jieshuang Dong

In high density urban areas, pedestrians have a great influence on the capacity of intersections. This paper studies the influence of pedestrians on road capacity and proposes an exclusive right-turn lane capacity model considering pedestrian-vehicle interaction (PV-RTC). Firstly, a pedestrian-vehicle interaction (PVI) model is proposed based on the logit model and static games theory of incomplete information. Through this model, the probability of 6 kinds of pedestrian-vehicle interaction situations (vehicles yield to pedestrians, pedestrians yield to vehicles, etc.) in the crosswalk can be obtained. Then, based on the basic idea of the stop line method and the probabilities of above situations, the PV-RTC model is established, and the sensitivity analysis of the important factors (pedestrian arrival rate, yielding rate, and green time ratio) affecting the model is carried out to clarify the mechanism of the proposed model. Finally, a pedestrian-vehicle interaction model of cellular automata for the exclusive right-turn lane is established and its simulation results are compared with the results of the PV-RTC model. The results show that the relative error between the microscopic simulation model and PV-RTC model is less than 15% overall, which verifies the validity of the PV-RTC model. This study provides references for a more precise estimation method of pedestrian impact on road capacity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 5310-5318

Nowadays many people deaths in the world were reported from vehicle traffic accidents that involved with pedestrian impact in higher percentage. This percentage may increase if there is no strong attention to the pedestrian safety from automakers and authorities. This study will focus on the analysis of pedestrian head impact on a car hood with different types of materials; also the hood thickness will be analysed with different measurements during the head test impact using the numerical simulation analysis which is available in ANSYS finite element software. The pedestrian head and front hood will be modelled using CAD software. Therefore the simulation will demonstrate the effects on the impact performance for each type of materials with different thickness used in this research. The observation from the numerical analysis showed that aluminium had high deformation as compared to steel and magnesium materials of hood. The steel had lowest deformation but it had higher equivalent stress when compared to aluminium and magnesium. Furthermore the lowest type of thickness produced high deformation and high equivalent stress value for each material type. In general each material had its own characteristic; therefore manufacturers can evaluate the lower material cost or design a safe front hood using the same material but with different thickness that suitable for pedestrian safety.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guibing Li ◽  
Zheng Tan ◽  
Xiaojiang Lv ◽  
Lihai Ren

Head injuries are often fatal or of sufficient severity to pedestrians in vehicle crashes. Finite element (FE) simulation provides an effective approach to understand pedestrian head injury mechanisms in vehicle crashes. However, studies of pedestrian head safety considering full human body response and a broad range of impact scenarios are still scarce due to the long computing time of the current FE human body models in expensive simulations. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to develop and validate a computationally efficient FE pedestrian model for future studies of pedestrian head safety. Firstly, a FE pedestrian model with a relatively small number of elements (432,694 elements) was developed in the current study. This pedestrian model was then validated at both segment and full body levels against cadaver test data. The simulation results suggest that the responses of the knee, pelvis, thorax, and shoulder in the pedestrian model are generally within the boundaries of cadaver test corridors under lateral impact loading. The upper body (head, T1, and T8) trajectories show good agreements with the cadaver data in vehicle-to-pedestrian impact configuration. Overall, the FE pedestrian model developed in the current study could be useful as a valuable tool for a pedestrian head safety study.


Author(s):  
Sharmin-E-Shams Chowdhury ◽  
Aleksandar Stevanovic ◽  
Nikola Mitrovic

Pedestrian walk timings at most U.S. traffic signals are run in concurrence with relevant signal phases for vehicular traffic. This usually means that signal operations coordinated for the major street can be interrupted by a pedestrian call. Such an interruption may in practice last for a few minutes, thus causing increased delays and stops for major traffic flows. An alternative to this design is to increase the cycle length and embed pedestrian timings within the ring-barrier structure of the prevailing coordination plan. Both approaches have advantages and disadvantages. A fresh approach offered by this study is a comprehensive experimental design and holistic performance evaluation perspectives. The study examines the two abovementioned treatments of pedestrian timings for a small corridor of five intersections in Utah. The experiments have been done in a high-fidelity microsimulation environment with the Software-in-the-Loop version of the field controller (Econolite ASC/3). Findings show that either approach works well for very low traffic demands. When the traffic demand increases findings cannot be generalized as they differ for major coordinated movements versus overall network performance. While major-street traffic prefers no interruption of the coordinated operations, the overall network performance is better in the other case. This can be explained by the fact that avoiding interruptions is usually achieved at the expense of longer cycle length, which increases delay for everyone in the network.


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