Volume 08
   


Understanding the Factors Affecting Urban Vehicle-to-Vehicle Crash Severity with Focus on Drivers' Route Familiarity

Authors

Mahyar Vahedi Saheli*


Abstract
Human factors are usually of paramount importance when it comes to traffic crashes. Drivers’ route familiarity or unfamiliarity is a critical human-related factor that has less been considered in the literature. This factor can lead to inattention, distraction, and dangerous behaviors due to familiar drivers’ over-confidence or unfamiliar drivers’ insufficient knowledge of road geometry and environment. The main objective of this study is to discover the factors affecting the severity of vehicle-to-vehicle crashes in Rasht city (in northern Iran) involving unfamiliar and familiar drivers using a logistic regression model. The results indicate the significant effect of human factors such as driver’s familiarity and age, collision type, angle and reason, temporal factors (season and time of day), vehicles involved in the crash, and environmental conditions on the injury severity of vehicle-to-vehicle crashes in urban roads. The results of this study can be used by policymakers and implementers to take appropriate measures to reduce the severity of vehicle-to-vehicle crashes in urban areas.

Keyword: Urban crash severity, Vehicle-to-vehicle accidents, Unfamiliar drivers, Familiar drivers, Route familiarity.

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