AI Summary of Peer-Reviewed Research

This page presents an AI-generated summary of a published research paper. The original authors did not write or review this article. [See full disclosure ↓]

Publishing process signals: MODERATE — reflects the venue and review process. — venue and review process.

Seatback bottoming out increased thoracic loading in rear impacts

Medicine research
Photo by Pixel-mixer on Pixabay · Pixabay License
Research area:EngineeringTransportation Safety and Impact AnalysisAutomotive and Human Injury Biomechanics

What the study found: The study found that in severe rear-impact collisions, intrusion can force the rear seat pan forward into the rearward-rotating front seatback, causing a bottoming-out effect that increases loading on the front occupant’s upper torso. The authors link this interaction to thoracic injury risk, even when the head is properly supported by the head restraint.
Why the authors say this matters: The authors say the findings highlight the need for improved rear structural design strategies to manage load paths in underride scenarios and to reduce front seatback rearward collapse and related occupant loading.
What the researchers tested: The researchers analyzed a real-world rear-impact collision that caused fatal thoracic injuries to the driver. They also conducted a vehicle-to-vehicle crash test to reproduce similar intrusion characteristics and examine the relative motion between the seatback and the rear seat structure.
What worked and what didn't: The analysis and crash test indicated that seatback bottoming out under intrusion conditions significantly elevates thoracic loading. The abstract does not describe any design change or countermeasure that was tested as working.
What to keep in mind: The available summary describes a single case study and a replication crash test, so the findings are limited to the conditions reported. The abstract does not provide detailed quantitative results or broader population-level evidence.

Key points

  • Severe rear impacts can create intrusion that drives the rear seat pan into the front seatback.
  • The seatback bottoming-out effect was linked to higher loading on the front occupant’s upper torso.
  • The authors associate this loading pattern with thoracic injury risk, even with proper head restraint support.
  • A real-world fatal crash and a vehicle-to-vehicle crash test were used to study the mechanism.
  • The authors suggest improved rear structural design to manage underride load paths.

Disclosure

Research title:
Seatback bottoming out increased thoracic loading in rear impacts
Authors:
Chandrashekhar K. Thorbole
Institutions:
Simulation Technologies (United States)
Publication date:
2026-01-16
OpenAlex record:
View
Image credit:
Photo by Pixel-mixer on Pixabay · Pixabay License
AI provenance: This post was generated by OpenAI. The original authors did not write or review this post.