2003
DOI: 10.3141/1840-19
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Are SUVs “Supremely Unsafe Vehicles”?: Analysis of Rollovers and Injuries with Sport Utility Vehicles

Abstract: With increasing speed limits and more light trucks penetrating the market, concern over their rollover risk is growing. In particular, the general public and automobile manufacturers would like to know if the increasingly popular sport utility vehicles (SUVs) are indeed safer than other vehicle platforms. The influences of various vehicle platforms on rollovers and driver injuries were investigated. Specifically, (a) the rollover intensities of SUVs vis-à-vis those of other vehicle types in single-vehicle cras… Show more

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Cited by 52 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…Given the ordered nature of the injury severity in crashes (representing an ordinal outcome), these methodological approaches generally fall under two main categories (based on whether this nature is considered or not): ordered-response models and unordered-response models. Ordered logit/probit (Khattak and Rocha, 2003;Lee and Li, 2014), generalized ordered logit (Wang and Abdel-Aty, 2008;Abegaz et al, 2014), and mixed generalized ordered logit (Eluru and Bhat, 2007;Eluru et al, 2008) models are among the models that do consider the ordered nature of crash severity. However, there is an increasing tendency towards using unordered response models, as well.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Given the ordered nature of the injury severity in crashes (representing an ordinal outcome), these methodological approaches generally fall under two main categories (based on whether this nature is considered or not): ordered-response models and unordered-response models. Ordered logit/probit (Khattak and Rocha, 2003;Lee and Li, 2014), generalized ordered logit (Wang and Abdel-Aty, 2008;Abegaz et al, 2014), and mixed generalized ordered logit (Eluru and Bhat, 2007;Eluru et al, 2008) models are among the models that do consider the ordered nature of crash severity. However, there is an increasing tendency towards using unordered response models, as well.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The results showed that truck-driver behaviours, sharp curves, and turning manoeuvres were associated with higher rollover risk. Khattak and Rocha (2003) evaluated the rollover intensity and severity of driver injury of Sport Utility Vehicles (SUVs). A binary logit model was applied to investigate the likelihood of rollover occurrence.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Analysis of variance (ANOVA), Chi-square test and t-tests are the most commonly used methods comparing various groups (Subhashini and Arumugam, 1981;Simons-Morton et al, 2005). Ordinary Least Square (OLS) models including linear and logistic regressions are frequently applied to find the relationships between outcomes and associated factors (Khattak et al, 1995;McElroy, 1967;Dissanayake and Perera, 2011;Khattak and Rocha, 2003). Some studies have noted the hierarchical nature of behavioral data and applied multi-level models to explain relationships (Treno et al, 2003;Huang et al, 2008;Kim et al, 2007).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 98%