posted on 2015-10-08, 09:09authored byPetros Evgenikos, Panagiotis Papantoniou, T. Hermitte, Pierre Van Elslande, Alan KirkAlan Kirk, Pete Thomas, Deniz Atalar, Manfred Pfeiffer, George Yannis
The objective of this research is to develop and describe a methodology that allows building the structure of a European Road Safety Observatory (ERSO) that addresses these e-safety issues, identify the nature of the data that has to be stored in such an observatory, in a way that it is easily interpretable and usable, and finally to implement suitable methods for appropriate e-safety data analyses that will assess the most promising technological counter-measures. For this reason, a five-step methodology is developed. The analysis revealed that a well matched statistical analysis model is necessary for quantitative assessment of the e-Safety systems, indicating whether they address the real users’ needs revealed by the causation analysis. The expansion of the current benefits figures to an EU level and the analysis of the interactions between technology-based applications are considered to be the fundamental plinth upon which the relevant structure and data of ERSO are determined,
Funding
This paper is based on work carried out within the scope of the DaCoTA (Data Collection Transfer and Analysis) projects of the 7th Framework Programs for Research, Technological Development and Demonstration of the European Commission.
History
School
Design
Published in
Transport Research Arena
Citation
EVGENIKOS, P. ... et al, 2014. European road safety and e-safety. IN: Proceedings of TRA2014 Transport Research Arena 2014: Transport Solutions: from Research to Deployment - Innovate Mobility, Mobilise Innovation! 14th-17th April 2014, Paris.
This work is made available according to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence. Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/