Government recommendations to place children into the rear areas of motor vehicles to avoid airbag induced injuries have been complicated by the fact that most adult occupied front seats will collapse into the rear area during rear-impacts, and thus pose another potentially serious injury hazard to rear-seated children. Many variables affect whether or not a front seat occupant will collapse into the rear child, and whether that interaction could be injurious to the child. For instance, the severity of rear impact, coupled with front and rear occupant sizes (mass and stature), and the level of front seat strength, all interrelate to influence whether or not a rear seated child is likely to be impacted and possibly injured. The most common types of child injuries in these instances are head and chest injuries. In this study, a "high-low" experimental method was employed with a multi-level "factorial analysis" technique to study "multivariate" biomechanics of child head injury potential determined from rear-seated 3 and 6 year-old child surrogates in different types of vehicle bodies mounted to a sled system. The sled-buck systems were towed rearward into crushable barriers that matched the crash pulses of the vehicle types being tested. Various sizes of adult surrogates (i.e. 50 kg up to 110 kg), seated in both the "typical" low strength "single recliner" collapsing type front seat (i.e. 3.2 kN) and a much stronger "belt-integrated" seat design (i.e. up to 14.5 kN), were tested in the two different "sled body-buck" set-ups at various impact levels (i.e. 22.5 to 50 kph). One set-up used a popular minivan vehicle body with "built-in booster" seats for the 3 year-old. The other used a 4-door family sedan vehicle body with the 6 year-old in a standard rear bench seat. The parameters of the tests enabled the experimental data to be combined into polynomial "head injury" functions of the independent variables so the "likelihood" of rear child head-injury potential could be "mapped" over ranges of the key parameters. Accident cases were compared with predictions to verify the methodology.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

front seat
12
rear
9
head injury
8
will collapse
8
collapse rear
8
rear child
8
vehicle body
8
child
7
vehicle
5
front
5

Similar Publications

surgery and autotransplantation may provide a promising option for radical resection of conventionally unresectable liver tumors. Two cirrhotic patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), which has an "awkward seat" located in the "intrahepatic vascular triangle area (IVTA)" that consists of the middle hepatic vein (MHV), the right branches of the Glisson sheath, and the inferior vena cava (IVC), underwent extended right-half hepatectomy followed by tumor resection and partial liver autotransplantation. Innovatively, the outflow of the tumor-free liver was reconstructed using pre-frozen allograft blood vessels from brain-dead donors; the patients recovered well postoperation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Influence of Occupant Characteristics, Seat Positioning, and Pre-Crash Maneuvers on Front Passenger Safety Performance.

J Biomech Eng

December 2024

Department of Biomedical Engineering and Mechanics, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA.

Crash avoidance vehicle maneuvers are known to influence occupant posture and kinematics which consequently may influence injury risks in the event of a crash. In this work, a generic buck vehicle finite element (FE) model was developed which included the vehicle interior and the front passenger airbag (PAB). Seat position and occupant characteristics including anthropometry, sex, and age were varied in a design of experiments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A generalized additive model analysis of school classroom environment and students' refractive state progression.

BMC Public Health

November 2024

National Clinical Research Center for Ocular Diseases, Eye Hospital, Wenzhou Medical University, Wenzhou, 325027, China.

Article Synopsis
  • The study conducted in Fengxian District, Shanghai, aimed to explore the relationship between the cleanliness of high school classrooms and students' visual acuity and refractive status, considering the students' heavy reliance on classroom settings for learning.
  • Researchers sampled 48 classrooms from 8 high schools, monitoring a cohort of 1087 students over a year while analyzing various environmental factors affecting their eyesight.
  • Findings showed significant increases in certain refractive issues, like astigmatism, but no notable change in uncorrected visual acuity; classroom features like size, blackboard height, and multimedia display distance were linked to these visual changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rear passenger restraint in frontal NCAP tests compared to the right-front passenger.

Traffic Inj Prev

November 2024

ProBiomechanics LLC, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.

Objective: This study compared kinematic and biomechanic responses of the 5 female Hybrid III in the right-rear and right-front passenger seats in frontal NCAP tests with 2015-16 MY vehicles. It focused on the lap-shoulder belt restraint of the rear passenger.

Methods: Eleven frontal NCAP tests were conducted by NHTSA at 56 km/h with a lap-shoulder belted 5 Hybrid III dummy in the right-rear and right-front seats.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Characterization of the species of associated with corn seedlings in Delaware.

Plant Dis

November 2024

University of Delaware, Plant and Soil Sciences , 16483 County Seat Hwy, Georgetown, Delaware, United States, 19947;

Corn (Zea mays L.) is the top grain crop by hectares grown in Delaware (DE). Increased pre- and post-emergence damping-off in corn caused by Pythium species have been observed in recent seasons.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!