Data from: Cultural influence of social information use in pedestrian road-crossing behaviours
Social information use is common in a wide range of group-living animals, notably in humans. The role it plays in decision-making could be a key to understanding how social groups make collective decisions. The observation of road-crossing behaviours in the presence of other individuals is an ideal...
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Zusammenfassung: | Social information use is common in a wide range of group-living animals,
notably in humans. The role it plays in decision-making could be a key to
understanding how social groups make collective decisions. The observation
of road-crossing behaviours in the presence of other individuals is an
ideal means to study the influence of social information on
decision-making. This study investigated the influence of culture on
social information used by pedestrians in a potentially dangerous
scenario, namely road crossing. We scored the collective crossing of
pedestrians at four locations in Nagoya (Japan) and three locations in
Strasbourg (France). French pedestrians cross against the lights much more
often (41.9%) than Japanese ones (2.1%). Individuals deciding to cross the
road were strongly influenced by the behaviour and the presence of other
pedestrians, especially in Japan, where a stronger conformism was noted.
However, Japanese pedestrians were half as likely to be influenced by
social information as their French counterparts when crossing at the red
light, as they were more respectful of rules. Men show riskier behaviour
than women (40.6% versus 25.7% of rule-breaking, respectively), deciding
quickly and setting off earlier than women. Further related studies could
help target specific preventive, culture-specific solutions for pedestrian
safety. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.tc365 |