Bicyclist safety performance functions for a U.S. city.
Elsevier
item.page.uri.label
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
item.page.orlis-pc
NL
item.page.orlis-pl
Amsterdam
item.page.language
item.page.issn
0001-4575
item.page.zdb
item.page.orlis-av
item.page.type
item.page.type-orlis
relationships.isAuthorOf
Abstract
Efforts have intensified to apply a more evidence-based approach to traffic safety. One such effort is the Highway Safety Manual, which provides typical safety performance functions (SPFs) for common road types. SPFs model the mathematical relationship between frequency of crashes and the most significant causal factors. Unfortunately, the manual provides no SPFs for bicyclists, despite disproportionately high fatalities among this group. In this paper, a method for creating city-specific, bicycle SPFs is presented and applied to Boulder, Colorado. This is the first time a bicycle SPF has been created for a U.S. city. Such functions provide a basis for both future investigations into safety treatment efficacy and for prioritizing intersections to better allocate scarce funds for bicycle safety improvements. As expected, the SPFs show that intersections with higher bicyclist traffic and higher motorist traffic have higher motorist-cyclist collisions. The SPFs also demonstrate that intersections with more cyclists have fewer collisions per cyclist, illustrating that cyclists are safer in numbers. Intersections with fewer than 200 entering cyclists have substantially more collisions per cyclist.
Description
Keywords
Journal
Accident Analysis and Prevention
item.page.issue
item.page.dc-source
item.page.pageinfo
S. 114-122