Are Double-Lane Roundabouts Safe Enough? A CHAID Analysis of Unsafe Driving Behaviors
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Test Route
2.3. Experiment Design
2.4. Unsafe Driving Behavior Classification
2.5. Analytic Method
- Each node is branched on the basis of the selected dependent variable;
- The χ2 test is used as the default for branching;
- Branching is performed by default even if the classification attribute is not significant;
- If there is no significant difference, the branches merge into the same branch;
- If the branches differ significantly, the branch is retained and the branching continues to the next level.
- -
- Selection of the relevant independent variables in such a way that, in the resulting hierarchical structure, the first independent variable is chosen to partition the input data that has the lowest p-value. In hypothesis testing, if the p-value is equal to or less than the predefined significance level α, then the alternative hypothesis suggesting dependence between the variables is accepted; otherwise, the node is considered as the final node. Tree building ends when the p-values of all independent variables are higher than the predefined split threshold.
- -
- Merging of the categories of all independent variables so that only the nodes with statistically significant difference between them appear in the graph. This is because the algorithm detects the pairs of values of the independent variables that differ the least from the dependent variable. If the obtained p-value after applying the chi-square test is higher than a certain merging threshold, the algorithm merges the categories that do not have significant differences from a statistical point of view. The search for a new merging pair continues until no more pairs are found for which the p-value is smaller than the specified significance level α.
3. Results
3.1. Unsafe Driving Behaviors
3.2. Entry Unsafe Behaviors
3.3. Circulation Unsafe Behaviors
4. Discussion
4.1. Unsafe Driving Behaviors
4.2. Entry Unsafe Behaviors
4.3. Circulation Unsafe Behaviors
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Category | Number | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Age | ||
18–25 | 22 | 33.33 |
26–50 | 26 | 39.39 |
51–65 | 18 | 27.28 |
Gender | ||
Male | 41 | 62.12 |
Female | 25 | 37.88 |
Entry Unsafe Behaviors | ||
N | Scheme | Type |
1 | High speed of approach: Approaching the roundabout with a speed higher than the speed limit | |
2 | Selecting unsafe gap: Selecting unsafe gap when entering the roundabout | |
3 | Rejecting a safe gap: Rejecting a safe gap when entering the roundabout | |
4 | Turn signal omitted: Changing lane on the entry leg without using the turn signal to indicate it | |
5 | Failing to detect proper lane when entering: Selecting the inner lane (external lane) of the circulatory roadway coming from the right lane (left lane) of the entry leg | |
Circulation Unsafe Behaviors | ||
N | Scheme | Type |
6 | Splitting other users’ lanes: The driver splits other users’ lanes on the circulatory roadway in order to exit the roundabout | |
7 | Giving way: Giving way to incoming vehicle when circulating the roundabout | |
8 | Failing to detect proper lane when circulating: The driver selects the inner lane of the circulatory roadway, even if they take the external lane of the exit lane | |
9 | Failing to detect proper lane when taking the first exit: The driver selects the inner lane of the circulatory roadway, even if they have to take the first exit | |
Exit Unsafe Behaviors | ||
N | Scheme | Type |
10 | Failing to detect proper lane when exiting: Selecting the inner lane of the exit lane coming from the external lane of the circulatory roadway | |
11 | High exit speed: Exiting the roundabout with a speed higher than the speed limit |
Number | Percentage (%) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Entry unsafe behaviors | |||
1 | High speed of approach | 533 | 24.56 |
2 | Selecting unsafe gap | 181 | 8.34 |
3 | Rejecting a safe gap | 35 | 1.61 |
4 | Turn signal omitted | 167 | 7.69 |
5 | Failing to detect proper lane when entering | 339 | 15.62 |
Total | 1255 | 57.84 | |
Circulation unsafe behaviors | |||
6 | Splitting other users’ lanes | 180 | 8.29 |
7 | Giving way | 87 | 4.01 |
8 | Failing to detect proper lane when circulating | 257 | 11.84 |
9 | Failing to detect proper lane when taking the 1st exit | 70 | 3.26 |
Total | 594 | 27.37 | |
Exit unsafe behaviors | |||
10 | Failing to detect proper lane when exiting | 5 | 0.23 |
11 | High exit speed | 316 | 14.56 |
Total | 321 | 14.79 | |
Total unsafe behaviors | 2170 | 100.00 |
Variable | Variable Name | Categories |
---|---|---|
V1 | Roundabout radius (RR) | <14 m |
14–20 m | ||
>20 m | ||
V2 | Circulatory roadway width (CW) | <8 m |
>8 m | ||
V3 | Entry width (EnW) | <8 m |
>8 m | ||
V4 | Exit width (ExW) | <8 m |
>8 m | ||
V5 | Entry radius (EnR) | <10 m |
10–30 m | ||
30–50 m | ||
>50 m | ||
V6 | Exit radius (ExR) | <10 m |
10–30 m | ||
30–50 m | ||
>50 m | ||
V7 | Maneuver (M) | 1st exit |
2nd exit | ||
3rd exit | ||
U-turn |
Specifications | Growing method | CHAID |
Dependent variable | UDB | |
Independent variables | V1, V2, V3, V4, V5, V6, V7 | |
Validation | Cross-validation | |
Maximum tree depth | 3 | |
Minimum Cases in Parent Node | 40 | |
Minimum Cases in Child Node | 15 | |
Results | Independent variables included | V5, V7, V4 |
Number of Nodes | 11 | |
Number of Terminal Nodes | 7 | |
Depth | 3 |
Specifications | Growing method | CHAID |
Dependent variable | EUB | |
Independent variables | V1, V2, V3, V4, V5, V6, V7 | |
Validation | Cross-validation | |
Maximum tree depth | 3 | |
Minimum cases in parent node | 40 | |
Minimum cases in child node | 15 | |
Results | Independent variables included | V7, V5, V1 |
Number of nodes | 12 | |
Number of terminal nodes | 8 | |
Depth | 2 |
Specifications | Growing method | CHAID |
Dependent variable | CUB | |
Independent variables | V1, V2, V3, V4, V5, V6, V7 | |
Validation | Cross-validation | |
Maximum tree depth | 3 | |
Minimum cases in parent node | 40 | |
Minimum cases in child node | 15 | |
Results | Independent variables included | V7, V6, V5 |
Number of nodes | 8 | |
Number of terminal nodes | 5 | |
Depth | 2 |
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Pulvirenti, G.; Distefano, N.; Leonardi, S.; Tollazzi, T. Are Double-Lane Roundabouts Safe Enough? A CHAID Analysis of Unsafe Driving Behaviors. Safety 2021, 7, 20. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety7010020
Pulvirenti G, Distefano N, Leonardi S, Tollazzi T. Are Double-Lane Roundabouts Safe Enough? A CHAID Analysis of Unsafe Driving Behaviors. Safety. 2021; 7(1):20. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety7010020
Chicago/Turabian StylePulvirenti, Giulia, Natalia Distefano, Salvatore Leonardi, and Tomaz Tollazzi. 2021. "Are Double-Lane Roundabouts Safe Enough? A CHAID Analysis of Unsafe Driving Behaviors" Safety 7, no. 1: 20. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety7010020
APA StylePulvirenti, G., Distefano, N., Leonardi, S., & Tollazzi, T. (2021). Are Double-Lane Roundabouts Safe Enough? A CHAID Analysis of Unsafe Driving Behaviors. Safety, 7(1), 20. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety7010020