Interrater Reliability of Manual Pavement Distress Evaluations
Publication: Journal of Transportation Engineering
Volume 136, Issue 2
Abstract
Many government agencies are faced with the challenge of pavement evaluation and maintenance as part of their pavement management systems. These agencies perform or contract manual or automated distress surveys over the pavement network to monitor the structure performance and obtain the necessary data to calculate pavement condition indexes. Although manual distress ratings are done according to well-defined criteria, a certain amount of subjectivity and the experience of the raters have an undoubted influence on the ratings. This study proposes a new approach to estimate the interrater or intercrew reliability for manual or semiautomated distress data collection. The proposed analysis acknowledges that a certain degree of variability in the visual distress ratings is likely to occur and, thus, minimum acceptable values of complete and partial agreements of the crews or raters are suggested. The statistical approach to validate the level of agreement between the ratings of two raters or crews is based on the use of the chi-square distribution to test hypotheses about multinomial experiments.
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Acknowledgments
The writers thank Robert S. Young, P.E., Pavement Preservation Engineer, and Tito T. Medina, Jr., Supervisor of the Pavement Evaluation Unit, New Mexico DOT, for their valuable collaboration during all stages of the pavement evaluation program and data collection in 2006 and 2007. The enlightening discussions with Robert S. Young regarding distress data variability and QA/QC provided useful insights. The contents of this article reflect the views and ideas of the writers who are solely responsible for the analysis, conclusions, and accuracy of the data presented herein.
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© 2010 ASCE.
History
Received: Oct 15, 2007
Accepted: Sep 23, 2009
Published online: Jan 15, 2010
Published in print: Feb 2010
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