国际学术期刊
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国际学术期刊
Motorist Behavior and Safety Impacts on Bicyclists from Centerline and Shoulder Rumble Strips on High-Speed Two-Lane Highways proposals due May 24
发布时间:2022-4-2110:58:37来源:作者:点击量:16331   

  BACKGROUND

  Shoulder and centerline rumble strips and stripes on roadways, whether conventional or sinusoidal, provide many safety benefits to motorists. But for bicyclists, coming in contact with them can be a very jarring experience, and riding safely upon them nearly impossible. State departments of transportation (DOTs) are increasingly installing rumble strips on roads also traveled by bicyclists, particularly rural two-lane roads with speed limits over 50 miles per hour (mph). These roads often have less than four feet of clear useable shoulder space. Bicyclists, riding on such roads with rumble strips and limited rideable shoulder space, feel increasingly challenged and may find no option but to ride in the lane with high-speed mixed traffic, increasing the likelihood of a crash with a motor vehicle.

  Another safety issue of much concern to the bicyclists is the motorists’ behavior when passing them on roadways with centerline rumble strips. However, there is very little information available on the motorist-bicyclist interaction on rural roads where rumble strips decrease or eliminate the rideable shoulder space. A Michigan DOT study on motorists’ behavior on rural roads with centerline rumble strips concluded that motorists were less likely to cross centerline rumble strips when passing bicyclists to avoid vibration and noise (https://www.michigan.gov/documents/mdot/RC1627_489159_7.pdf). This would most likely make them pass too closely to the bicyclist, greatly increasing the risk of the bicyclist losing control and crashing.

  Federal legislation allows federal Highway Safety Improvement Program (HSIP) projects to install rumble strips if “the rumble strips or other warning devices do not adversely affect the safety or mobility of the bicyclists and pedestrians….” However, there is little research on quantifying the effects of shoulder and centerline rumble strips on bicyclists’ safety. With growing use of rumble strips nationwide to reduce run-off-road and head-on crashes of the motorists, it is imperative that the unintended safety impacts on the bicyclists also be determined to better inform state DOTs’ design policies.

  OBJECTIVES

  The objectives of this research are to:

  1. Determine and quantify safety impacts on bicyclists on rural high-speed two-lane roadways with centerline and shoulder rumble strips.

  2. Characterize motorists’ behavior when encountering bicyclists on rural high-speed two-lane roadways with centerline and shoulder rumble strips. Aspects of motorists’ behavior to be assessed could include, among other things, lateral and longitudinal controls, reaction time, and eye movement, when passing bicyclists traveling in the same direction on such roads.

  3. Develop a guide on various rumble strip applications, with a focus on their impact on bicyclists’ safety.

  RESEARCH PLAN

  Proposers are required to provide a detailed research plan for accomplishing the project objectives and producing the required deliverables. They are expected to present their current thinking in sufficient detail to demonstrate their understanding of the issues needing resolution and the soundness of their approach to meet the research objectives. The NCHRP particularly seeks the insights of the proposers on how best to achieve the research objectives.

  The research plan needs to be realistic to ensure that it can be accomplished within the constraints of the contract funds and time. The plan will be accomplished in phases; work proposed for each phase will be divided into tasks. Work in each task will be described with attention to details. Task descriptions below are intended to provide a framework for conducting the research.

  The research plan shall be executed in two phases and comprise, at a minimum, the following tasks.