Authors
Kathryn L Loftis, Katrina R Swett, R Shayn Martin, J Wayne Meredith, Joel D Stitzel
Publication date
2014/1/2
Journal
International journal of crashworthiness
Volume
19
Issue
1
Pages
57-70
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
A National Automotive Sampling System–Crashworthiness Data System (NASS–CDS) based Similarity Scoring Methodology (SSM) is presented for the quantitative comparison of real-world crashes to crash tests. Using NASS–CDS 2000–2008, five categorical and five continuous crash, vehicle and occupant parameters were utilised for frontal and side impacts. Mahalanobis metric results revealed that 1% of frontal and 23% of side NASS–CDS cases scored received similarity scores of <0.14 demonstrating greater similarity to standard crash tests. These included 20,334 frontal and 442,511 side impact case occupants (weighted). On average, the best scores occurred for NASS–CDS cases compared to FMVSS 214 side crash tests. The majority of real-world crashes had lower delta-Vs and maximum crush than associated crash tests. The results will aid in the study of occupant safety and vehicle crashworthiness …
Total citations
Scholar articles
KL Loftis, KR Swett, RS Martin, JW Meredith, JD Stitzel - International journal of crashworthiness, 2014