Video-based assessment of cyclist-tram track interactions in wet road conditions
(2022) 10 International Cycling Safety Conference- Abstract
- Cyclist underreporting of lower severity and single cyclist collisions to police results in the underestimation of the societal costs of lower severity and single cyclist collisions. Prevention strategies for these types of collisions are becoming a popular area of research, and video-based approaches have obvious potential for these cases, allowing for detailed analyses of underreported lower severity and single cyclist falls. Video-based studies have been used to investigate site specific cyclist safety issues such as railway crossings [3]. They have also been used for near-collision or near-miss incidents and Surrogate Measures of Safety (SMoS). A recent Irish study has identified the most common collision configurations and factors... (More)
- Cyclist underreporting of lower severity and single cyclist collisions to police results in the underestimation of the societal costs of lower severity and single cyclist collisions. Prevention strategies for these types of collisions are becoming a popular area of research, and video-based approaches have obvious potential for these cases, allowing for detailed analyses of underreported lower severity and single cyclist falls. Video-based studies have been used to investigate site specific cyclist safety issues such as railway crossings [3]. They have also been used for near-collision or near-miss incidents and Surrogate Measures of Safety (SMoS). A recent Irish study has identified the most common collision configurations and factors with the inclusion of unreported cases. Findings indicate that falls involving interactions with light rail tram tracks are common in Dublin; they were the most common infrastructural collision partner in this study and a contributing factor in 23% of single cyclist collisions, supplementing international findings. Furthermore, along with increasing popularity of cycling, many new light rail systems are being implemented across Europe as part of a broader move towards sustainable transport. Accordingly, further investigation is required to avoid potential conflicts. Therefore, this study aims to use video-based assessment to correlate fall risk with trajectories and crossing angles. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/829cc8b3-e011-4f4f-88af-9ba7155d948a
- author
- Gildea, Kevin LU ; Mercadal-Baudart, Clara ; Caulfield, Brian and Simms, Ciaran
- publishing date
- 2022
- type
- Contribution to conference
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Single cyclist falls, Surrogate safety measures, Tram tracks, Video analysis
- pages
- 3 pages
- conference name
- 10 International Cycling Safety Conference
- conference location
- Dresden, Germany
- conference dates
- 2022-11-08 - 2022-11-10
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- id
- 829cc8b3-e011-4f4f-88af-9ba7155d948a
- date added to LUP
- 2022-12-13 19:37:12
- date last changed
- 2023-06-09 12:00:59
@misc{829cc8b3-e011-4f4f-88af-9ba7155d948a, abstract = {{Cyclist underreporting of lower severity and single cyclist collisions to police results in the underestimation of the societal costs of lower severity and single cyclist collisions. Prevention strategies for these types of collisions are becoming a popular area of research, and video-based approaches have obvious potential for these cases, allowing for detailed analyses of underreported lower severity and single cyclist falls. Video-based studies have been used to investigate site specific cyclist safety issues such as railway crossings [3]. They have also been used for near-collision or near-miss incidents and Surrogate Measures of Safety (SMoS). A recent Irish study has identified the most common collision configurations and factors with the inclusion of unreported cases. Findings indicate that falls involving interactions with light rail tram tracks are common in Dublin; they were the most common infrastructural collision partner in this study and a contributing factor in 23% of single cyclist collisions, supplementing international findings. Furthermore, along with increasing popularity of cycling, many new light rail systems are being implemented across Europe as part of a broader move towards sustainable transport. Accordingly, further investigation is required to avoid potential conflicts. Therefore, this study aims to use video-based assessment to correlate fall risk with trajectories and crossing angles.}}, author = {{Gildea, Kevin and Mercadal-Baudart, Clara and Caulfield, Brian and Simms, Ciaran}}, keywords = {{Single cyclist falls; Surrogate safety measures; Tram tracks; Video analysis}}, language = {{eng}}, title = {{Video-based assessment of cyclist-tram track interactions in wet road conditions}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/150140110/ICSC_tram_tracks.pdf}}, year = {{2022}}, }