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Title: Safety Effectiveness of Leading Pedestrian Intervals using Empirical Bayes Method
Accession Number: 01123265
Record Type: Component
Availability: Transportation Research Board Business Office 500 Fifth Street, NW Abstract: There is a need to investigate strategies to reduce pedestrian-vehicle crashes at intersections. The leading pedestrian interval (LPI) has been recommended as one strategy for reducing pedestrian-vehicle crashes at signalized intersections; however, there has been limited research to quantify the safety effects of the LPI. Site characteristics, traffic volumes, pedestrian volumes, and crash data were obtained for 10 signalized intersections where the LPI was implemented in State College, Pennsylvania. Similar data were obtained for 63 reference sites within the State College area. An empirical Bayes approach was incorporated in a before-after study design to evaluate the safety effectiveness of the LPI implementations. The aggregate analysis indicated a 37 percent reduction in pedestrian-vehicle crashes, which is significant at the 90 percent confidence level. A disaggregate analysis indicated that crash reductions are significantly greater at intersections with larger pedestrian volumes. Given the low-cost of this strategy, a modest reduction in crashes is needed to justify their use. Based on the estimated safety effectiveness, the necessary crash reduction is easily achievable.
Monograph Title: Monograph Accession #: 01120148
Report/Paper Numbers: 09-1308
Language: English
Corporate Authors: Transportation Research Board 500 Fifth Street, NW Authors: Fayish, Aaron CGross, FrankPagination: 14p
Publication Date: 2009
Conference:
Transportation Research Board 88th Annual Meeting
Location:
Washington DC, United States Media Type: DVD
Features: Figures
(2)
; References
(14)
; Tables
(4)
TRT Terms: Uncontrolled Terms: Geographic Terms: Subject Areas: Highways; Operations and Traffic Management; Safety and Human Factors; I83: Accidents and the Human Factor
Source Data: Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting 2009 Paper #09-1308
Files: TRIS, TRB
Created Date: Jan 30 2009 5:33PM
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