This is the amount from the dataset showing the claimed amount at different months paid by the insurers.
Hour of the day vs Number of Accidents in R Shiny & ggplot
The below graph show no. of accidents that occurred during each hour of the day with respect to different collisions.
Rear-end collisions often result from drivers failing to pay attention to the road or following too closely.
Front-impact collisions—when the front end of a vehicle hits another vehicle or something on the side of the road, like a tree or telephone pole.
Rollover accidents happen under a wide range of circumstances and are more likely to cause catastrophic injuries.
From the years 1994-1996 we can see the monthly breakdown of the claims.
January has the most number of claims compared to the lowest in August.
From 1995 to 2015, the incident severity % for major damage and total loss is the same. Total loss signifies that the car is unrepairable. When an insurance provider determines that the car is unrepairable, they will refund the original cost of the vehicle after deducting their service fee.
The three most common ways a car can be involved in an accident are. The first occurs when a driver loses control of his or her car and collides with a stationary object (a single-vehicle accident). The second is when the vehicle collides with another vehicle. The third type of collision occurs when numerous cars collide, as in chain-reaction accidents.
Here from the Sankey chart we can see that the total loss of the vehicle was caused by Multi-vehicle and single-vehicle collisions only. Minor damages include vehicle theft and parked car events, as well as single and multiple vehicle crashes, but the numbers are small for Single & multiple collisions