Publication | Closed Access
Predicting Vehicle Crashworthiness: Validation of Computer Models for Functional and Hierarchical Data
42
Citations
32
References
2009
Year
EngineeringCrash Computer ModelModeling MethodSafety ScienceVehicle DynamicSimulationHierarchical DataSimulation MethodologyData ScienceDriver BehaviorUncertainty QuantificationManagementTransport AccidentSystems EngineeringBayesian MethodsModeling And SimulationStatisticsBayesian Hierarchical ModelingTransport SafetyRoad Traffic SafetyVehicle CrashworthinessPredictive AnalyticsComputer ScienceBayesian StatisticsSafety AnalysisReal Vehicle CrashworthinessComputer ModelsModel AnalysisData Modeling
Abstract The CRASH computer model simulates the effect of a vehicle colliding against different barrier types. If it accurately represents real vehicle crashworthiness, the computer model can be of great value in various aspects of vehicle design, such as the setting of timing of air bag releases. The goal of this study is to address the problem of validating the computer model for such design goals, based on utilizing computer model runs and experimental data from real crashes. This task is complicated by the fact that (i) the output of this model consists of smooth functional data, and (ii) certain types of collision have very limited data. We address problem (i) by extending existing Gaussian process-based methodology developed for models that produce real-valued output, and resort to Bayesian hierarchical modeling to attack problem (ii). Additionally, we show how to formally test if the computer model reproduces reality. Supplemental materials for the article are available online. Keywords: : Air bag timingBayesian analysisBiasHierarchical modelingHypothesis testingValidationVehicle design
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