Affiliation:
1. Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo
2. Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee
Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the relative risk and efficiency of road crossing experienced by blind and sighted pedestrians at a single-lane roundabout with two levels of traffic volume and at two distances from the roundabout. Background: With the rapid spread of modern roundabouts across the United States, their accessibility to blind pedestrians has become an important concern. To date, accessibility research relevant to blind pedestrians has focused on multilane roundabouts, and single-lane roundabouts have been virtually ignored. Method: Blind and sighted participants made judgments about when they would cross a single-lane roundabout with high and low traffic volumes, at exit and entry lanes, and at the actual crosswalks and at locations farther from the roundabout. Results: Relative to sighted participants, blind participants’ judgments about when to cross were more frequently risky, especially when traffic volume was high. Blind participants also were slower to make crossing judgments and accepted fewer crossing opportunities. Both groups made somewhat safer and more efficient judgments at locations farther from the roundabout. Conclusion: Some single-lane roundabouts may pose greater risk to blind pedestrians than to sighted pedestrians, especially when traffic volume is high. Crosswalk location merits further investigation as a design issue. Application: These findings are relevant to transportation planners and engineers who are responsible for the accessibility of public rights-of-way.
Subject
Behavioral Neuroscience,Applied Psychology,Human Factors and Ergonomics
Cited by
10 articles.
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