An exploration into younger and older pedestrians' risky behaviours at train level crossings


Autoria(s): Freeman, James; McMaster, Mitchell; Rakotonirainy, Andry
Data(s)

18/08/2015

Resumo

Background: Younger and older pedestrians are both overrepresented in train-pedestrian injury and fatality collision databases. However, scant research has attempted to determine the factors that influence level crossing behaviours for these high risk groups. Method: Five focus groups were undertaken with a total of 27 younger and 17 older pedestrian level crossing users (N = 44). Due to the lack of research in the area, a focus group methodology was implemented to gain a deeper exploratory understanding into the sample’s decision making processes through a pilot study. The three main areas of enquiry were identifying the: (a) primary reasons for unsafe behaviour; (b) factors that deter this behaviour and (c) proposed interventions to improve pedestrian safety at level crossings in the future. Results: Common themes to emerge from both groups regarding the origins of unsafe behaviours were: running late and a fatalistic perspective that some accidents are inevitable. However, younger pedestrians were more likely to report motivators to be: (a) non-perception of danger; (b) impulsive risk taking; and (c) inattention. In contrast, older pedestrians reported their decisions to cross are influenced by mobility issues and sensory salience. Conclusion: The findings indicate that a range of factors influence pedestrian crossing behaviours. This paper will further outline the major findings of the research in regards to intervention development and future research direction.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/86710/

Publicador

MDPI AG

Relação

http://www.mdpi.com/journal/safety

DOI:10.3390/safety1010016

Freeman, James, McMaster, Mitchell, & Rakotonirainy, Andry (2015) An exploration into younger and older pedestrians' risky behaviours at train level crossings. Safety, 1(1), pp. 16-27.

Fonte

Centre for Accident Research & Road Safety - Qld (CARRS-Q); Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; School of Nursing; School of Psychology & Counselling

Palavras-Chave #170100 PSYCHOLOGY #pedestrian behaviour #train level crossings #rule violations #qualitative research
Tipo

Journal Article