Despite the attention that walking continues to receive, the attitudes and feelings that pedestrians themselves have regarding walking have largely been ignored. To address this gap in research 268 college students participated in a study to determine pedestrian appraisals of safety at varying levels of intersection threat and different driver behaviors (safe, distracted, and aggressive behaviors). Using the framework of the theory of planned behavior and the component process model of appraisal a questionnaire instrument was designed to assess pedestrians’ feelings of safety, driver threat, control, and violation of social norms at intersections. Results indicate pedestrians report less control and increased violation of social norms as speed and number of lanes increase. Pedestrians reported feeling the least safe at intersections with distracted drivers and reported them as the highest violators of social norms. Implications of the findings for pedestrian safety countermeasure design, increasing walking behaviors, and including pedestrian perceptions in assessments of an area’s overall walkability are discussed.
[1]
I. Ajzen.
The theory of planned behavior
,
1991
.
[2]
S. Sarkar,et al.
Drivers' Perception of Pedestrians' Rights and Walking Environments
,
2004
.
[3]
F. Eves,et al.
Prediction of Specific Types of Physical Activity Using the Theory of Planned Behavior
,
2007
.
[4]
K. Scherer.
Appraisal considered as a process of multilevel sequential checking.
,
2001
.
[5]
Heinrich H. Bülthoff,et al.
APGV '05: 2nd Symposium on Applied Perception in Graphics and Visualization
,
2004
.
[6]
N Gallin.
Quantifying Pedestrian Friendliness - Guidelines for Assessing Pedestrian Level of Service
,
2001
.
[7]
Charles Zegeer,et al.
PEDESTRIAN FACILITIES USERS GUIDE. PROVIDING SAFETY AND MOBILITY
,
2002
.
[8]
E Scott Geller,et al.
An instrumented vehicle assessment of problem behavior and driving style: do younger males really take more risks?
,
2002,
Accident; analysis and prevention.