Lower-Body Injury Rates in Full-Engagement Frontal Impacts: Field Data and Logistic Models
Date Published: 2006-04-03
Paper Number:2006-01-1666
DOI: 10.4271/2006-01-1666
Citation:
Laituri, T., Henry, S., Sullivan, K., and Prasad, P., "Lower-Body Injury Rates in Full-Engagement Frontal Impacts: Field Data and Logistic Models," SAE Technical Paper 2006-01-1666, 2006, doi:10.4271/2006-01-1666.
Lower-body injury data for adults in real-world frontal impacts in the National Automotive Sampling System (NASS) were collected, analyzed, and modeled via statistical methods. Two levels of lower-body injury were considered: maximum serious-to-fatal (MAIS3+) and moderate-to-fatal (MAIS2+). In the analysis, we observed that a substantial fraction of all lower-body injured occupants had no recorded floor/toe pan intrusion: 47% of all MAIS3+ injured occupants; 69% of all MAIS2+ injured occupants. In the statistical modeling, we developed binary logistic regression models to fit the MAIS3+ and MAIS 2+ injury data. The statistically significant variables (p ≤ 0.05) were the speed change of the crash, postcrash floor/toe pan intrusion, level of restraint, occupant age, and occupant gender. The two resulting models demonstrated different levels of fidelity: the Goodman-Kruskal Gamma statistic of association was 0.84 for the MAIS3+ model and 0.60 for the MAIS2+ model (where 1.0 is perfect association). However, the two statistical models identically predicted the total number of lower-body injured occupants in NASS. These analyses and statistical models provided insight into the effect of various crash variables on lower-body risks.
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