LGFeb 17

Real-time Secondary Crash Likelihood Prediction Excluding Post Primary Crash Features

arXiv:2602.16739v1
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses a practical limitation in traffic management systems for real-time crash prediction, though it is incremental in method.

The paper tackled the problem of predicting secondary crash likelihood in real-time without relying on post-crash features, achieving 91% correct identification with a false alarm rate of 0.20 and improving the AUC from up to 0.902 to 0.952.

Secondary crash likelihood prediction is a critical component of an active traffic management system to mitigate congestion and adverse impacts caused by secondary crashes. However, existing approaches mainly rely on post-crash features (e.g., crash type and severity) that are rarely available in real time, limiting their practical applicability. To address this limitation, we propose a hybrid secondary crash likelihood prediction framework that does not depend on post-crash features. A dynamic spatiotemporal window is designed to extract real-time traffic flow and environmental features from primary crash locations and their upstream segments. The framework includes three models: a primary crash model to estimate the likelihood of secondary crash occurrence, and two secondary crash models to evaluate traffic conditions at crash and upstream segments under different comparative scenarios. An ensemble learning strategy integrating six machine learning algorithms is developed to enhance predictive performance, and a voting-based mechanism combines the outputs of the three models. Experiments on Florida freeways demonstrate that the proposed hybrid framework correctly identifies 91% of secondary crashes with a low false alarm rate of 0.20. The Area Under the ROC Curve improves from 0.654, 0.744, and 0.902 for the individual models to 0.952 for the hybrid model, outperforming previous studies.

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