3 research outputs found
Impact assessment of its applications for vulnerable road users
The EU-sponsored VRUITS project has prioritized ITS applications which have a potential to improve the safety, mobility and comfort of vulnerable road users (VRUs) and performed a quantitative safety, mobility and comfort assessment for the 10 most promising systems. The assessment methodology addresses not only the direct effects of the systems, but also unintended effects and effects through changes in mobility patterns. The 10 selected ITS were: VRU beacon system, Powered Two Wheelers oncoming Vehicle information, Bicycle-to-vehicle communication, Cooperative Intersection safety, Green wave for cyclists, Pedestrian & Cyclist detection with Emergency Braking, Blind spot detection, Intelligent pedestrian traffic signal, Crossing adaptive lighting and Information on bike rack vacancy. The paper presents the quantitative estimates for the impact on safety, mobility and comfort. The outputs of the impact assessment are translated into socioeconomic indicators via a social cost-benefit analysis
Improving the safety and mobility of vulnerable road users through ITS applications [VRUITS] D2.2 assessment methodology
ITS Applications have in recent years assisted in reducing the number of fatalities in Europe. However,
Vulnerable Road Users (VRUs) have not benefited as much as vehicle users. The EU-sponsored
VRUITS project assesses the safety and mobility impacts of ITS applications for VRUs, assesses the
impacts of current and upcoming ITS applications on the safety and mobility of VRUs, identifies how
the usability and efficiency of ITS applications can be improved, and recommends which actions have
to be taken at a policy level to accelerate deployment of such ITS.
This deliverable reports on the needed modification and development of methodologies to assess the
impacts of ITS applications for VRUs in the domains of safety, mobility and comfort and cost-benefit
analysis (CBA). Safety assessment estimates the potential reduction in fatalities and injuries to VRU
as a result of ITS applications for VRUs. Mobility and comfort are relatively new impact areas for
study. The definition of mobility used in VRUITS is: Mobility is considered any form of outside (out of
house) movement based on the identified soft transport modes: walking, cycling or motorcycling.
These forms of movement are defined by trips from a starting point to a destination in order to conduct
an out of house activity. Thus, the mobility impact assessment investigates the changes in the movement
out of house (trips, length of trips, etc.) that are the result of the use of an ITS applications for
VRUs. VRUITS uses the definition of comfort from Slater: “(...) a pleasant state of physiological, psychological,
and physical harmony between a human being and the environment” (Slater, 1985: p. 4).
Thus, the challenge in VRUITS is to assess comfort impacts as a result of the use of ITS applications
by VRUs. Finally, the CBA monetises the quantified impacts (safety, mobility and comfort) to calculate
the Benefit-Cost ratios.
An analysis of the sub-groups of VRUs, presented in this report, forms the basis for determining which
criteria the impact assessment methodologies must meet. This analysis also illuminates the data necessary
as inputs to the impact assessment methodologies.
For each impact assessment area, the state-of-the-art is presented. Each impact assessment area
describes the required modifications to the methodology selected for use in the VRUITS project, to
meet the demands of the VRU sub-groups as well as the ITS applications selected for analysis in the
VRUITS project
Improving the safety and mobility of vulnerable road users through ITS applications [VRUITS] D7.3 Final Exploitation Plan
This document is the final version of the “Final Exploitation Plan” as created in WP7: Dissemination and Exploitation. The document gives an overview of the exploitable results of the project, analyses the stakeholders interested in the results, and gives the preliminary plans for several partners to ex-ploit the results.
Chapter 2 briefly gives an overview of the project results as produced in the other work packages. Chapter 3 lists the stakeholders of the VRUITS project result exploitation. Based on these chapters, in chapter 4 the exploitation details are explored based on three target areas for exploitation of the re-sults; being industrial activities, academic interests, and regulatory norms and standards.
From the perspective of industrial activities, one of the benefits of the VRUITS project is the extensive cost-benefit analysis, which can guide specific development activities. In the conclusion, a link is made to the Impact Analysis describing a collection of systems with a positive benefit-cost ratio, as potential starting point for such development activities. Combined with the results from the pilots in the Nether-lands and Spain this leads to technical research and developments for devices specifically targeting vulnerable road users. Examples mentioned of concrete developments triggered by the VRUITS pro-ject include technologies for portable beacons for VRU’s, and VRU-prepared traffic management equipment.
From the academic point of view, the expertise gained will be used by the partners through scientific publications, offered as expertise in future offerings, and used when developing future products. The pilot analysis and measurement tools as created in WP3 and WP4 will not be offered as separate products, but these and the setup and results as reported in WP5 also can be used in subsequent (fol-low-up) projects.
Norms and standards are relevant for all stake holders, as to enable a sufficiently large market to make developments economically feasible. The VRUITS project has triggered several initiatives with respect to standardisation, however the process of standardisation will continue beyond the life time of the VRUITS project. Here both follow-up projects (e.g. XCYCLE) and industry interest are expected to be sufficient to drive the progress of the standards beyond VRUITS. Next to norms and standards, also other actions at EU level are identified in the VRUITS project, helping towards exploitation of the VRUITS results. These are not covered in this deliverable, but are detailed in deliverable D6.2 “Rec-ommendations for actions at EU level and their assessment”