Welcome to Journal of Automotive Safety and Energy,

Journal Of Automotive Safety And Energy ›› 2016, Vol. 07 ›› Issue (04): 339-354.DOI: 10.3969/j.issn.1674-8484.2016.04.001

• Progress & Prospects •     Next Articles

Rear Seat Occupant Protection: What Do We Know and What is the Future?

HU Jingwen   

  1. 1. University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute,
    2. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 418109, USA)
  • Received:2016-11-17 Online:2016-12-25 Published:2016-12-28
  • About author:Dr. Jingwen HU,An Associate Research Scientist at the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute and the Department of Mechanical Engineering at University of Michigan. His research interests primarily focus on injury biomechanics in motor-vehicle crashes by a multidisciplinary approach using combination of experimental, numerical, and epidemiological procedures. His recent research focuses on adaptive safety designs under various crash scenarios for a diverse population.

Abstract:

Field data analyses have shown that the occupant protection in rear seats failed to keep pace with the advances in front seats likely due to their low occupancy and the lack of advanced safety technologies. This study provided a comprehensive literature review on rear seat occupant protection addressing the different needs for a diverse population, ranging from children in harness restraints to adults with a wide range of stature, age, and body shape. Based on the findings from field data analyses, experimental studies, and computational simulations, rear seat safety can be improved by properly using age-appropriate child restraints and introducing
adjustable/advanced/adaptive features into the rear seat restraint systems. However, the lack of biofidelic injury assessment tools for children, older, and/or obese occupants will be one of the major challenges for further improving the rear seat safety. The increased proportion of older and obese populations, the growth of lightweight vehicles, the popularity of smart-phone-based ride service, and the advances in active safety technology and autonomous vehicles will likely increase the significance of rear seat safety but at the same time will pose additional challenges. All these trends suggested that more efforts on optimizing rear seat restraint systems adapting to a wide range of impact conditions, occupant characteristics and sitting postures are necessary in the future.

Key words: vehicle safety, rear seat occupant protection, diverse population, seatbelt, airbag, restraint system optimization, autonomous vehicle