ACtrafficengr
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 5, 2002
- 1,641
I'm trying to analyze some crash data for our county highways.
The goal is to find specific things causing crashes that can be addressed by changing the road design. For example, if "traffic control device disregarded" is over-represented at a specific location, maybe the stop sign is in the wrong place.
I have some data like this:
Case # Vehicle Contributing factor
11 1 Alcohol
11 1 Glare
25 1 Unsafe speed
25 1 not applicable
25 2 Traffic control device disregarded
25 2 Tire failure/inadequate
Each case number represents an individual crash. Each case has two contributing factors per vehicle involved, which means in practical terms, each case number has between 2 and 10 (usually 2-4) contributing factors.
For each of the 45 different factors, I need the percentage of case numbers that have that contributing factor. For example, 15% of cases involve speeding, 18% involve slippery pavement, etc. Also, I don't want to double-count cases where the same factor was attributed to both vehicles.
Any suggestions?
If your suggestion is, "You need to learn Access," my reply is, "Yes, that's true, but I don't have time."
Thanks!
"...students of traffic are beginning to realize the false economy of mechanically controlled traffic, and hand work by trained officers will again prevail." - Wm. Phelps Eno, ca. 1928
"I'm searching for the questions, so my answers will make sense." - Stephen Brust
The goal is to find specific things causing crashes that can be addressed by changing the road design. For example, if "traffic control device disregarded" is over-represented at a specific location, maybe the stop sign is in the wrong place.
I have some data like this:
Case # Vehicle Contributing factor
11 1 Alcohol
11 1 Glare
25 1 Unsafe speed
25 1 not applicable
25 2 Traffic control device disregarded
25 2 Tire failure/inadequate
Each case number represents an individual crash. Each case has two contributing factors per vehicle involved, which means in practical terms, each case number has between 2 and 10 (usually 2-4) contributing factors.
For each of the 45 different factors, I need the percentage of case numbers that have that contributing factor. For example, 15% of cases involve speeding, 18% involve slippery pavement, etc. Also, I don't want to double-count cases where the same factor was attributed to both vehicles.
Any suggestions?
If your suggestion is, "You need to learn Access," my reply is, "Yes, that's true, but I don't have time."
Thanks!
"...students of traffic are beginning to realize the false economy of mechanically controlled traffic, and hand work by trained officers will again prevail." - Wm. Phelps Eno, ca. 1928
"I'm searching for the questions, so my answers will make sense." - Stephen Brust