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Journal Article

Citation

Dadvar S, Lee YJ, Shin HS, Khodaparasti H. Data Brief 2020; 32: e106154.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.dib.2020.106154

PMID

32904374 PMCID

Abstract

The datasets and tool presented in this article are related to the research article entitled "Improving crash predictability of the Highway Safety Manual through optimizing local calibration process" (Dadvar et al., 2020) [1], in which these datasets were used to investigate alternative local calibration methods for the Highway Safety Manual (HSM) [2] local application. The datasets are integrated Highway Safety Information System (HSIS) [3] state-wide rural two-lane, two-way roads (R2U) data from states of Illinois and Washington. The HSIS is a database that maintains motor vehicle crash data, roadway inventory, and traffic volume data for several US states. It is an excellent source of data to highway safety research and can be used to investigate many research questions. However, to prepare an analysis-ready roadway safety dataset based on the HSIS or any databases that store the relevant data in multiple different datasets, the researchers should integrate multiple datasets, merge or unmerge and remove certain inconsistent records, and finally clean the integrated dataset. The HSIS staff is usually accommodating and eager to help, but sometimes the nature of data needs is complicated and laborious. A tool named Roadway Safety Data Integrator (RSDI) was developed for combining, segmenting, and selecting homogeneous (unchanged during the study period for certain variables of interest) HSIS roadway segments and also crash assignment by desired crash attributes (e.g., crash severity or type). The RSDI tool can be helpful for integrating different safety-related datasets such as roadway inventory (including grade, curve, and other subsets), traffic volume, and motor vehicle crash data; also, it can do required segmentation and identify the homogeneous roadway segments over the desired years of study that are the basis for development and calibration of the HSM predictive models. The shared datasets contain homogeneous roadway segments, geometric details, and crash data for six years from Illinois (2005-10) and Washington (2010-15). The datasets and RSDI tool would be important sources generally for investigating highway safety research questions and in particular, for HSM-related analyses. The RSDI tool can be used for similar purposes and it is not limited to the HSIS data. It can be used for segmentation and finding homogeneous segments of any datasets that follow linear referencing. The datasets and RSDI tool are hosted in the Mendeley Data repository [4].


Language: en

Keywords

Accident; Road safety; Motor vehicle crash; Data integration; Highway Safety Information System (HSIS); Highway Safety Manual (HSM)

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