High-Visibility Enforcement on Driver Compliance with Pedestrian Right-of-Way Laws: 4-Year Follow-Up

Author:

Van Houten Ron1,Malenfant J. E. Louis2,Blomberg Richard3,Huitema Brad1,Hochmuth Jonathan1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Western Michigan University, 3700 Wood Hall, West Michigan Avenue, Kalamazoo, MI 49008

2. Center for Education and Research in Safety, 17 Atkinson Court, Shediac Cape, New Brunswick E4P 8Y4, Canada

3. Dunlap and Associates, 110 Lenox Avenue, Stamford, CT 06906-2300

Abstract

This study is a follow-up to a previous study that implemented high-visibility enforcement with social norming to produce a cultural change in driver yielding behavior. The objective was to determine the extent to which observed increases in driver yielding obtained in the previous study persisted over a follow-up period of nearly 4 years after the program of high-visibility enforcement intervention ended. The study involved limited enforcement and no new publicity. Observers collected data on staged and naturally occurring crossings at the same six sites at which enforcement took place in the previous study and at the same six spillover-effect sites (referred to as generalization sites in this report) where no enforcement had taken place. Observers employed the same observation procedures used in the original study. Results showed that yielding behavior continued on an upward trend with both the enforcement and generalization sites, exhibiting significantly higher rates of driver yielding during the follow-up period than at the end of the intervention period almost 4 years earlier. Yielding rates averaged 76.5% at the enforcement sites and 77.0% at the generalization sites. Thus, above and beyond the significant increase documented by the original study from before to immediately after the intervention, this study showed an additional significant increase in yielding from the end of the intervention to the follow-up period. The results suggest a fundamental change in driver behavior likely resulting from a tipping-point effect.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference1 articles.

Cited by 13 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Examining the Effects of Gateway Width on Motorist Yielding to Pedestrians;Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board;2023-12-08

2. The sustained and generalized effects of multifaceted treatment on unsignalized pedestrian crossings;Journal of Transport & Health;2023-07

3. Exploring the Effect of Visibility Factors on Vehicle–Pedestrian Crash Injury Severity;Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board;2023-04-15

4. Assessment of different pedestrian communication strategies for improving driver behavior at marked crosswalks on free channelized right turns;Journal of Safety Research;2023-02

5. Changing driver yielding behavior on a city-wide basis;Journal of Organizational Behavior Management;2021-09-13

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