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Restraint systems considering occupant diversity and pre-crash posture.

Kyle BoyleAbeselom FantaMatthew P ReedKurt FischerAlex SmithAngelo AdlerJingwen Hu
Published in: Traffic injury prevention (2021)
This study investigated the effects of occupant size and shape variability, posture, and restraint design on injury risk for high-speed frontal crashes. More forward initial postures due to active safety features may decrease head, neck, and lower extremity injury risk, but may also increase chest injury risk. Safety concerns observed for large occupants include head strike-through and a conflict between head and chest injuries. Obese occupants had higher knee-thigh-hip injury risk. New restraints that adapt to occupant size and body shape may improve crash safety for all occupants. Further investigation is needed to confirm and extend the findings of this study.
Keyphrases
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