Evaluating pedestrian behavior at crosswalks: Validation of a pedestrian behavior questionnaire for the U.S. population
•Understanding pedestrians’ overall behavior on a crosswalk.•A PBQ for the U.S. population classified pedestrian behaviors into five components.•Violation, error, lapses, aggressive and positive behaviors could be measured.•The effects of gender and age on the PBQ scores were investigated.•The PBQ c...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Accident analysis and prevention 2017-09, Vol.106, p.191-201 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Understanding pedestrians’ overall behavior on a crosswalk.•A PBQ for the U.S. population classified pedestrian behaviors into five components.•Violation, error, lapses, aggressive and positive behaviors could be measured.•The effects of gender and age on the PBQ scores were investigated.•The PBQ can be an instrument of pedestrian self-assessment.
The aim of this study was to develop and validate a self-reporting Pedestrian Behavior Questionnaire (PBQ) for the U.S. population to measure frequency of risky behaviors among pedestrians. The PBQ includes 50 survey items that allow respondents to rate the frequency with which they engage in different types of road-using behaviors as pedestrians. The validation study was conducted on 425 participants (228 males and 197 females) between the ages of 18 and 71. Confirmatory factor analysis differentiated pedestrian behaviors into five factor categories: violations, errors, lapses, aggressive behaviors, and positive behaviors. A short version of the PBQ with 20 items was also created by selecting four items with high factor loadings from each of the five factor categories. Regression analyses investigated associations with scenario-based survey behavioral responses to validate the five-factor PBQ subscale scores and composite score. For both long and short versions, each of these five individual factor scales were found to be reliable (0.7 |
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ISSN: | 0001-4575 1879-2057 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.aap.2017.05.020 |