Abstract
Many people outside of traffic engineering are required to conduct a crash history analysis as part of their scoping efforts for non-safety funded projects. Some engineers may not have much experience working with crash data or may not know how best to manipulate it to arrive at meaningful results. Using real-world examples, this presentation will walk through each step in requesting, filtering, diagramming, and interpreting crash data.
Session Number
176
Session Title
How to Prepare a Meaningful Crash Analysis
Track Title
Safety
Location
MATH 175
Date of Version
March 2023
Recommended Citation
Ruble, Taylor, "How to Prepare Meaningful Crash Analysis" (2023). Purdue Road School. 58.
https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/roadschool/2023/presentations/58
Start Date
3-15-2023 10:00 AM
End Date
3-15-2023 10:50 AM
Event Website
https://roadschool.purdue.edu/roadschoolprogram/program.html
Included in
How to Prepare Meaningful Crash Analysis
MATH 175
Many people outside of traffic engineering are required to conduct a crash history analysis as part of their scoping efforts for non-safety funded projects. Some engineers may not have much experience working with crash data or may not know how best to manipulate it to arrive at meaningful results. Using real-world examples, this presentation will walk through each step in requesting, filtering, diagramming, and interpreting crash data.
https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/roadschool/2023/presentations/58