Publication

ADSEAT - Adaptive seat to reduce neck injuries for female and male occupants

Neck injuries sustained in low severity vehicle crashes are of worldwide concern and the risk is higher for females than for males. The objective of the study was to provide guidance on how to evaluate protective performance of vehicle seat designs aiming to reduce the incidence of neck injuries for female and male occupants. The objective was achieved by reviewing injury risk, establishing anthropometric data of an average female, performing dynamic volunteer tests comprising females and males, and developing a finite element model, EvaRID, of an average female. With respect to injury criteria, it was concluded based on the tests that using NIC (with a lower threshold value) and Nkm (with reduced intercept values) for females would be a suitable starting point. Virtual impact simulations with seats showed that differences were found in the response of the BioRID II and EvaRID models, for certain seats.

Author(s)
Astrid Linder, Sylvia Schick, Wolfram Hell, Mats Y. Svensson, Anna Carlsson, Paul Lemmen, Kai-Uwe Schmitt, Andreas Gutsche, Ernst Tomasch
Research area
Human body protection
Publication type
Scientific journal paper
Published in
Accident Analysis and Prevention, 60, pp. 334-343
Project
ADSEAT - Adaptive Seat to Reduce Neck Injuries for Female and Male Occupants (associated project)
Year of publication
2013