CLOSE OVERLAY

NCHRP Standard Definitions for Comparable Pavement Cracking Data

Project Details
STATUS

Completed

START DATE

12/31/15

END DATE

08/31/17

FOCUS AREAS

Infrastructure

RESEARCH CENTERS InTrans, CTRE, PROSPER
SPONSORS

National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP)

PARTNERS

Georgia Tech Research Corporation

Researchers
Principal Investigator
Omar Smadi

Director, CTRE

Co-Principal Investigator
Halil Ceylan

Director, PROSPER

Co-Principal Investigator
Yelda Turkan
Co-Principal Investigator
Yi-Chang (James) Tsai

About the research

Many state and local agencies collect downward pavement imagery using highway-speed data collection vehicles. The images are subsequently processed using proprietary semi- or fully-automated crack detection and classification software to identify pavement cracking for use in asset management systems. There are multiple methods and software for defining, classifying, and reporting cracking data. In addition, these methods and the cracking data they produce are not always comparable between states, even if similar data collection and detection technologies are used. One outcome of this situation is that vendors must customize the cracking definitions for each client they serve.

In order to unify data reporting, sharing, and evaluation, standardization of pavement cracking definitions is needed. Research is needed to define cracking measurement terms for uniformity and potential standardization, building upon work done in the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) provisional protocol (PP) 67 and 68. Additionally, research is needed to produce user and system requirements to aid in the future development of production-grade evaluation software for classifying cracking type, extent, and severity. The standard definitions will aid in sharing information among agencies and vendors as well as reporting to the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and setting national, state, and local performance goals.

The objective of this research is to develop standard, discrete definitions for common cracking types in flexible, rigid, and composite pavements. The definitions shall classify cracking type, extent, and severity based on information from images collected by highway-speed data collection vehicles, including orientation, length, density, displacement, location, and other relevant factors. The standard definitions shall be used to facilitate comparable measurement and interpretation of pavement cracking in the highway community. The definitions shall be of sufficient detail to serve as the basis for user and system requirements for cracking evaluation software for automated data collection. Application to both existing and emerging image-based data collection technologies shall be considered.

TOP