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Journal Article

Citation

Roh HJ. J. Transp. Eng. A: Systems 2022; 148(7): e04022036.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, American Society of Civil Engineers)

DOI

10.1061/JTEPBS.0000690

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This paper introduces a methodology to quantify traffic change triggered by the combined effect of weather hazards based on winter weather hazards models. The winter weather hazards models for three vehicle types were developed with weigh-in-motion (WIM) data collected in the commuter highway in the cold Canadian region for 5 years. The developed model was utilized to simulate the variations of the percentage reduction for each vehicle type based on the 239 pairs of weather combinations composed of six cold categories and various amounts of snowfall. The first phase involved measuring the marginal effect of weather factors such as cold category (or temperature) on the percentage reduction in traffic volume. The second phase involved utilizing the same winter weather traffic model to quantify the effect of combined weather factors on the percentage reduction. The percentage reduction of the total traffic and passenger cars increased as temperature deteriorated and snowfall increased. Truck traffic decreased as snowfall increased, but interestingly, as temperature deteriorated, it was estimated that the truck traffic volume increased. This phenomenon assumed that truck traffic moves from low-maintenance to high-maintenance highways as the weather deteriorates. The methodology to quantify traffic volume changes can be adopted by highway agencies to determine the timing of the snowplow operation based on the risk assessed in terms of traffic volume reduction. It can also be used to predict the percentage reduction of traffic and then determine whether to open or close a highway.


Language: en

Keywords

Alberta Transportation; Cold region commuter highway; Percentage reduction; Traffic shifting; Weigh-in-motion (WIM); Winter weather hazards

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