Exploring New Methodologies and Perspectives on the Road Safety Impacts of Bus Priority


Book Description

Road accidents have and will remain a major concern as cities around the world continue to grow. The safety problem is likely to worsen as population growth is accompanied by increased travel. For many cities, these trends have led to a greater provision of public transport as private vehicles become a less viable mode of transport. With the rise in public transport travel, it comes as no surprise that road management agencies are turning to an increased application of priority measures to improve the travel experience for commuters. For buses, the provision of priority measures has typically been justified based on travel time savings and operational benefits. Although recent years have seen the advances in research valuing the wider ridership, mode shift and environmental benefits of bus priority schemes, including the network wide benefits, a major issue that has yet to be considered in bus priority planning is the road safety impacts of providing priority schemes. This thesis therefore aims to develop an in-depth understanding of the road safety implications of implementing bus priority through an investigation of accident records and conflicts in Metropolitan Melbourne. It is structured around six approaches that had been established to fill the knowledge in the area of bus priority safety effects. Each approach is the focus of a thesis chapter where the research context is discussed before the research methodology is presented. Results and key findings that emerged from subsequent analyses were used as a basis to understand the implications of implementing bus priority in the context of bus priority planning and research. The first approach concerns an exploration of the safety effects of bus priority at the aggregate level. Here, a before-after safety evaluation of both "space based" and "time based" bus priority was carried out to understand its effects at the network and bus route levels. A before-after accident type analysis was done to examine whether accident counts or nature of accidents had changed following the implementation of bus priority. Results of the safety evaluation based on the Empirical Bayes approach showed that the implementation of bus priority treatments led to a 14% reduction in accidents. "Space based" treatments (mainly bus lanes) yielded a stronger positive safety effect (18.2%)compared to "time based" ones (11.1%). In terms of fatal and serious injury accidents, a drop of 42 to 29 per annum was recorded. Given that different design types are available in before-after safety evaluation, the second approach focuses on understanding how the choice of comparison group type affected the bus priority safety estimate. Using the Empirical Bayes (EB) and Comparison Group (CG) approaches, it was found that the effect of using different comparison group types led to discrepancies in the final safety estimates. It is likely that these differences were due to the (necessary) omission of sites with zero accident history and effect of matching treatment sites with similar sites in the CG approach. A new approach that combined both EB and CG results showed promise as a more precise safety estimate was obtained. The third approach relates to an investigation of bus accidents at the route level. Using two mainstream modelling methodologies (MENB - Mixed Effects Negative Binomial and BPNN - Back Propagation Neural Network modelling), risks factors in bus accidents were explored with particular attention paid to the safety effect of bus priority. Results showed that bus priority led to lower occurrence for certain accidents types. The MENB and BPNN model results showed that bus priority had the effect of reducing route section level accident frequency by about 53.5%. The MENB model recorded better performance which pointed to benefits in adopting the MENB approach to account for time- and location-specific effects in accident count modelling. The fourth approach concerns the analysis of bus accidents in terms of vehicle, driver, roadway and environmental factors. This was done to identify the significant risk factors in a bus company database of accidents where bus drivers were deemed to be at-fault. Similar to the third approach, the aim was to understand the effect of bus priority on drivers' at-fault probability in bus-involved accidents. Results from mixed logit modelling showed that bus length / age, driver's gender / age / experience / accident record, road type, speed limit, traffic / daylight conditions, and the presence of bus priority affect the likelihood of bus drivers being at-fault in bus-involved accidents. For bus priority, the effect was found to be random as bus priority only reduced the at-fault likelihood for some 57.8% of drivers. The fifth approach centres on an investigation of the bus priority effect (bus lanes) at a corridor-level through micro-simulation. The focus was on conflicts at intersections and bus stops as the introduction of bus lanes was expected to have most impact on traffic movements at these locations. Results showed that the provision of bus lanes, regardless of whether they are created through space reallocation or creation, lead to a reduction in conflicts at intersections and bus stop locations. These pointed to lower rear-end and lane change accident risks for vehicles when bus lanes are in place. The sixth approach concerns an estimation of crash risk for vehicles that are behind a slowing or stationary bus at a bus stop in a mixed traffic configuration. This was done to quantify the safety benefit delivered by bus priority schemes that segregate buses from mainstream traffic. Using recorded travel behaviour and accident history of a representative road corridor, the average crash risk of vehicles that were in conflict with buses was found to be 0.0154% (with a standard error of 0.0063%). Based on the assumption of an average of thirty such conflicts occurring daily, it works out that there is an approximate 80% chance of one or more accidents taking place annually as a result of buses slowing down or being stationary at bus stops. Overall the thesis presents a range of advances in knowledge in the area of bus priority. Through the six approaches, new light has been shed on the safety effects of bus priority. The thesis concludes with a synthesis of the findings, in which its implications in the context of bus priority research and planning as well as opportunities for future research are presented.




Information Technology and Intelligent Transportation Systems


Book Description

This volume includes the proceedings of the 2015 International Conference on Information Technology and Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITITS 2015) which was held in Xi’an on December 12-13, 2015. The conference provided a platform for all professionals and researchers from industry and academia to present and discuss recent advances in the field of Information Technology and Intelligent Transportation Systems. The presented information technologies are connected to intelligent transportation systems including wireless communication, computational technologies, floating car data/floating cellular data, sensing technologies, and video vehicle detection. The articles focusing on intelligent transport systems vary in the technologies applied, from basic management systems to more application systems including topics such as emergency vehicle notification systems, automatic road enforcement, collision avoidance systems and some cooperative systems. The conference hosted 12 invited speakers and over 200 participants. Each paper was under double peer reviewed by at least 3 reviewers. This proceedings are sponsored by Shaanxi Computer Society and co-sponsored by Chang’an University, Xi’an University of Technology, Northwestern Poly-technical University, CAS, Shaanxi Sirui Industries Co., LTD.




Roundabouts


Book Description

TRB's National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Report 672: Roundabouts: An Informational Guide - Second Edition explores the planning, design, construction, maintenance, and operation of roundabouts. The report also addresses issues that may be useful in helping to explain the trade-offs associated with roundabouts. This report updates the U.S. Federal Highway Administration's Roundabouts: An Informational Guide, based on experience gained in the United States since that guide was published in 2000.




Making Transit Work


Book Description

This report was prepared for policy makers searching for ways to boost public transit use in U.S. urban areas and wishing to know what can be learned from the experiences of Canada and Western Europe. Describes the differences in public transit use among U.S., Canadian, and Western European cities; identifies those factors, from urban form to automobile usage, that have contributed to these differences; and offers hypotheses about the reasons for these differences--from historical, demographic, and economic conditions to specific public policies, such as automobile taxation and urban land use regulation.










HRIS Abstracts


Book Description







Traffic Safety Culture


Book Description

This book provides traffic safety researchers and practitioners with an international and multi-disciplinary compendium of theoretical and methodological concepts relevant to the research and application of Traffic Safety Culture aiming towards a vision of zero traffic fatalities.




Statistical and Econometric Methods for Transportation Data Analysis


Book Description

The book's website (with databases and other support materials) can be accessed here. Praise for the Second Edition: The second edition introduces an especially broad set of statistical methods ... As a lecturer in both transportation and marketing research, I find this book an excellent textbook for advanced undergraduate, Master’s and Ph.D. students, covering topics from simple descriptive statistics to complex Bayesian models. ... It is one of the few books that cover an extensive set of statistical methods needed for data analysis in transportation. The book offers a wealth of examples from the transportation field. —The American Statistician Statistical and Econometric Methods for Transportation Data Analysis, Third Edition offers an expansion over the first and second editions in response to the recent methodological advancements in the fields of econometrics and statistics and to provide an increasing range of examples and corresponding data sets. It describes and illustrates some of the statistical and econometric tools commonly used in transportation data analysis. It provides a wide breadth of examples and case studies, covering applications in various aspects of transportation planning, engineering, safety, and economics. Ample analytical rigor is provided in each chapter so that fundamental concepts and principles are clear and numerous references are provided for those seeking additional technical details and applications. New to the Third Edition Updated references and improved examples throughout. New sections on random parameters linear regression and ordered probability models including the hierarchical ordered probit model. A new section on random parameters models with heterogeneity in the means and variances of parameter estimates. Multiple new sections on correlated random parameters and correlated grouped random parameters in probit, logit and hazard-based models. A new section discussing the practical aspects of random parameters model estimation. A new chapter on Latent Class Models. A new chapter on Bivariate and Multivariate Dependent Variable Models. Statistical and Econometric Methods for Transportation Data Analysis, Third Edition can serve as a textbook for advanced undergraduate, Masters, and Ph.D. students in transportation-related disciplines including engineering, economics, urban and regional planning, and sociology. The book also serves as a technical reference for researchers and practitioners wishing to examine and understand a broad range of statistical and econometric tools required to study transportation problems.