Developing A Grouped Random Parameters Multivariate Spatial Model To Explore Zonal Effects For Segment And Intersection Crash Modeling

Keywords

Grouped random parameters model; Multivariate spatial autocorrelation; Segment and intersection crash analysis; Zonal effects

Abstract

It is acknowledged that crash occurrence on segments and intersections could be affected by multilevel factors. Omission of important explanatory variables could result in biased and inconsistent parameter estimates. This paper contributes to the literature by examining the zonal effects which are always excluded or ignored in traffic safety research for segments and intersections. A grouped random parameters multivariate spatial model is proposed to identify both observable zonal effects and unobserved heterogeneity at the zonal level by considering the heterogeneous and spatial correlations. The proposed model is evaluated by comparing it with its three counterparts: a fixed parameters univariate spatial model without zonal factors, a random parameters univariate spatial model without zonal factors, and a random parameters univariate spatial model with zonal factors. The results indicate that the three random parameters models could consistently provide better performance than the fixed parameters model and the models including zonal factors outperform the models without zonal factors. Besides, the proposed model has the optimal model performance compared with its counterparts, which validates the concept of adopting the multivariate modeling framework to identify the heterogeneous and spatial correlations of zonal effects. The results confirm the significantly correlated heterogeneous residuals in modeling zonal factors on crash occurrence on segments and intersections. However, the spatial correlations of zonal effects on different types of road entities (segments and intersections) in adjacent zones are not statistically significant. Furthermore, the proposed model provides more valuable insights about the crash occurrence on segments and intersections by revealing segment-/intersection-level factors together with zonal factors.

Publication Date

9-1-2018

Publication Title

Analytic Methods in Accident Research

Volume

19

Number of Pages

1-15

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amar.2018.05.001

Socpus ID

85047410284 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85047410284

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