Abstract
Seating configurations for autonomous driving will include reclined front seated occupants, which may expose child occupants seated directly behind to head impacts even in pre-crash scenarios. This study used mathematical modelling to investigate head contact for second-row child occupants seated behind a reclined front-seat during an automatic emergency braking (AEB) scenario. Although characterized by low speed (<1 m/s), head contacts were observed for a seatbelt-restrained 10-year-old and a 6-year-old in a low-back booster when the front-seat was reclined and in an aftward track position. Future seating configurations should consider the potential for head contact by second-row child occupants during crash-avoidance scenarios.
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CITATION STYLE
Patton, D. A., Maheshwari, J., Arbogast, K. B., & Graci, V. (2022). Head contacts in second-row pediatric occupants when the front-seat is reclined during automated emergency braking. Computer Methods in Biomechanics and Biomedical Engineering, 25(14), 1637–1648. https://doi.org/10.1080/10255842.2022.2032003
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