This study investigated how vehicle front-end geometry, impact speed, and vehicle
category influence injury risk to a midsize male pedestrian. Eighty-one generic
vehicle (GV) models representing sedans, sport utility vehicles (SUVs), pickup
trucks, and minivans sold in the United States were developed by morphing three
base models using an automated pipeline. Front-end parameters that were varied
included ground clearance (GC), bumper height (BH), hood leading-edge (HLE)
height, hood length (HL), bumper lead angle (BLA), hood angle (HA), and
windshield angle (WSA). Each vehicle impacted the Global Human Body Models
Consortium 50th percentile male simplified pedestrian (GHBMC M50-PS)
model at 30, 40, and 50 kph, totaling 243 simulations. Boundary conditions
followed the European New Car Assessment Program (Euro NCAP) pedestrian test
protocol. Thirty-five injury metrics were extracted across the head, neck,
thorax, abdomen, pelvis, and lower extremities. Linear mixed-effects regression
models assessed relationships between vehicle front-end geometry, impact speed,
and injury outcomes, with predictor selection guided by principal component
analysis (PCA) and collinearity diagnostics. Impact speed was the strongest
predictor of injury severity across all body regions. GC and HLE height were
also dominant predictors. Wrap-type trajectories were common at lower speeds and
in SUVs, trucks, and minivans, while sedans and minivans showed roof vaulting at
higher speeds. Head injury severity increased with speed and was influenced by
HA and BLA. Minivans showed elevated brain injury criterion (BrIC) and
cumulative strain damage measure (CSDM25) values, indicating
increased diffuse brain injury risk. Trucks produced the highest
thoracoabdominal injury metrics, which correlated with HL, HA, and HLE height.
Sedans showed higher right-side (trailing leg) femur forces, slightly lower
left-side femur forces than SUVs and minivans, and lowest tibia moments. Trucks
had greater tibia bending moments, while SUVs and minivans had higher left femur
moments compared to sedans. GC and impact speed exacerbated lower extremity
injuries, varying by vehicle category. These effects are driven by geometry:
Higher GC increases the unsupported span below the knee, promoting tibial
bending, while lower HLE heights shift impact forces above the knee, elevating
femur injury risk.