Reinfurt D W, Stewart J R, Weaver N L
University of North Carolina, Highway Safety Research Center, Chapel Hill 27599.
Accid Anal Prev. 1991 Oct;23(5):453-62. doi: 10.1016/0001-4575(91)90065-d.
The effect of the economy as reflected by employment and unemployment rates on motor vehicle fatalities, suicides, and homicides is examined using several national databases. First, regression models are fit to these fatality data-overall as well as for a variety of age-race-gender subgroups. Then time series models-autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) and structural time series analysis-were fit to the data, both with and without the economic indicators, to examine the relative ability of the models to forecast subsequent fatalities. No evidence was found using any of the modeling techniques that knowledge of yearly values of rates of employment, unemployment, and nonlabor force leads to improved forecasts of the level of motor vehicle fatalities, suicides, or homicides in the total U.S. population or within various subpopulations of interest.
利用几个国家数据库,研究了就业和失业率所反映的经济状况对机动车死亡、自杀和杀人案件的影响。首先,将回归模型应用于这些死亡数据——总体数据以及各种年龄-种族-性别亚组的数据。然后,将时间序列模型——自回归积分移动平均(ARIMA)模型和结构时间序列分析——应用于这些数据,分别在有和没有经济指标的情况下,以检验这些模型预测后续死亡人数的相对能力。使用任何一种建模技术,均未发现有证据表明,了解就业、失业和非劳动力人口比率的年度值能够改进对美国总人口或各相关亚人群中机动车死亡、自杀或杀人案件数量的预测。