Design of Wet Surface Traffic Signal Timing Change Intervals

Driver violations of traffic signals are a major cause of intersection vehicle crashes. The duration of yellow intervals is highly associated with driver yellow/red time stopping behavior. Rainy weather and wet pavement surface conditions may result in changes in both driver behavior and vehicle per...

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Main Author: Li, Huan
Other Authors: Civil Engineering
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Tech 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/78112
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02162011-094037/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-781122021-01-06T05:34:44Z Design of Wet Surface Traffic Signal Timing Change Intervals Li, Huan Civil Engineering Rakha, Hesham A. Wang, Linbing Lee, Suzanne E. El-Shawarby, Ihab traffic signal timing wet surface yellow interval rain Driver violations of traffic signals are a major cause of intersection vehicle crashes. The duration of yellow intervals is highly associated with driver yellow/red time stopping behavior. Rainy weather and wet pavement surface conditions may result in changes in both driver behavior and vehicle performance. The research presented in this thesis quantifies the impact of wet pavement surface and rainy weather conditions on driver perception-reaction times (PRTs) and deceleration levels, which are used in statistical models for the design of yellow intervals. A new dataset with a total of 648 stop-run records were collected as part of the research effort during rainy weather and wet pavement surface conditions at the Virginia Department of Transportation's Smart Road facility. This experiment was conducted at a 72.4 km/h (45 mi/h) approach speed where participant drivers encountered a yellow indication initiation. The participant drivers were randomly selected in different age groups (under 40 years old, 40 to 59 years old, and 60 years of age or older) and genders (female and male). Combined with an existing dataset that was collected by the same research group under clear weather conditions during the summer of 2008, statistical models for driver PRT and deceleration levels are developed, considering roadway surface and environmental parameters, driver attributes (age and gender), roadway grade, and time to the intersection at the onset of yellow. Using the state-of-the-practice procedures with the modeled PRT and deceleration levels, inclement weather yellow timings are then developed as a function of different factors (e.g., driver age/gender, roadway grade, speed limits, and precipitation levels). The results indicate that an increase in the duration of change interval is required for wet roadway surface and rainy weather conditions. Lookup tables are developed with different reliability levels to provide practical guidelines for the design of yellow signal timings in wet and rainy weather conditions. These recommended change durations can be integrated within the Vehicle Infrastructure Integration (VII) initiative to provide customizable driver warnings prior to a transition to a red indication. Master of Science 2017-06-13T19:44:02Z 2017-06-13T19:44:02Z 2011-02-02 2011-02-16 2014-05-23 2011-03-03 Thesis Text etd-02162011-094037 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/78112 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02162011-094037/ en_US In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic traffic signal timing
wet surface
yellow interval
rain
spellingShingle traffic signal timing
wet surface
yellow interval
rain
Li, Huan
Design of Wet Surface Traffic Signal Timing Change Intervals
description Driver violations of traffic signals are a major cause of intersection vehicle crashes. The duration of yellow intervals is highly associated with driver yellow/red time stopping behavior. Rainy weather and wet pavement surface conditions may result in changes in both driver behavior and vehicle performance. The research presented in this thesis quantifies the impact of wet pavement surface and rainy weather conditions on driver perception-reaction times (PRTs) and deceleration levels, which are used in statistical models for the design of yellow intervals. A new dataset with a total of 648 stop-run records were collected as part of the research effort during rainy weather and wet pavement surface conditions at the Virginia Department of Transportation's Smart Road facility. This experiment was conducted at a 72.4 km/h (45 mi/h) approach speed where participant drivers encountered a yellow indication initiation. The participant drivers were randomly selected in different age groups (under 40 years old, 40 to 59 years old, and 60 years of age or older) and genders (female and male). Combined with an existing dataset that was collected by the same research group under clear weather conditions during the summer of 2008, statistical models for driver PRT and deceleration levels are developed, considering roadway surface and environmental parameters, driver attributes (age and gender), roadway grade, and time to the intersection at the onset of yellow. Using the state-of-the-practice procedures with the modeled PRT and deceleration levels, inclement weather yellow timings are then developed as a function of different factors (e.g., driver age/gender, roadway grade, speed limits, and precipitation levels). The results indicate that an increase in the duration of change interval is required for wet roadway surface and rainy weather conditions. Lookup tables are developed with different reliability levels to provide practical guidelines for the design of yellow signal timings in wet and rainy weather conditions. These recommended change durations can be integrated within the Vehicle Infrastructure Integration (VII) initiative to provide customizable driver warnings prior to a transition to a red indication. === Master of Science
author2 Civil Engineering
author_facet Civil Engineering
Li, Huan
author Li, Huan
author_sort Li, Huan
title Design of Wet Surface Traffic Signal Timing Change Intervals
title_short Design of Wet Surface Traffic Signal Timing Change Intervals
title_full Design of Wet Surface Traffic Signal Timing Change Intervals
title_fullStr Design of Wet Surface Traffic Signal Timing Change Intervals
title_full_unstemmed Design of Wet Surface Traffic Signal Timing Change Intervals
title_sort design of wet surface traffic signal timing change intervals
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/78112
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02162011-094037/
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