The paper deals with the identification of variables and models that can explain why a certain Severity Level (SL) may be expected in the event of a certain type of crash at a specific point of an urban road network. Two official crash records, a weather database, a traffic data source, and information on the characteristics of the investigated urban road segments of Turin (Italy) for the seven years from 2006 to 2012 were used. Examination of the full database of 47,592 crash events, including property damage only crashes, reveals 9,785 injury crashes occurring along road segments only. Of these, 1,621 were found to be associated with a dataset of traffic flows aggregated in 5 minutes for the 35 minutes across each crash event, and to weather data recorded by the official weather station of Turin. Two different approaches, a back-propagation neural network model and a generalized linear mixed model were used. Results show the impact of flow and other variables on the SL that may characterize a crash; differences in the significant variables and performance of the two modelling approaches are also commented on in the manuscript.of the research studies have been focused on the likelihood of a crash without considering the crash outcome severity.
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