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A disaggregate model for quantifying the safety effects of winter road maintenance activities at an operational level
Authors:Taimur Usman  Liping Fu  Luis F. Miranda-Moreno
Affiliation:1. Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, N2L 3G1, Canada;2. Department of Civil Engineering & Applied Mechanics, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3A 2K6, Canada
Abstract:This research presents a disaggregated modeling approach for investigating the link between winter road collision occurrence, weather, road surface conditions, traffic exposure, temporal trends and site-specific effects. This approach is unique as it allows for quantification of the safety effects of different winter road maintenance activities at an operational level. Different collision frequency models are calibrated using hourly data collected from 31 different highway routes across Ontario, Canada. It is found that factors such as visibility, precipitation intensity, air temperature, wind speed, exposure, month of the winter season, and storm hour have statistically significant effects on winter road safety. Most importantly, road surface conditions are identified as one of the major contributing factors, representing the first contribution showing the empirical relationship between safety and road surface conditions at such a disaggregate level. The applicability of the modeling framework is demonstrated using several examples, such as quantification of the benefits of alternative maintenance operations and evaluation of the effects of different service standards using safety as a performance measure.
Keywords:Winter road safety   Winter road maintenance   Disaggregate accident frequency models
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