Does perceived steepness deter stair climbing when an alternative is available?

Perception of hill slant is exaggerated in explicit awareness. Proffitt ( Perspectives on Psychological Science 1 :110–122, 2006 ) argued that explicit perception of the slant of a climb allows individuals to plan locomotion in keeping with their available locomotor resources, yet no behavioral evid...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychonomic bulletin & review 2014-06, Vol.21 (3), p.637-644
Hauptverfasser: Eves, Frank F., Thorpe, Susannah K. S., Lewis, Amanda, Taylor-Covill, Guy A. H.
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description Perception of hill slant is exaggerated in explicit awareness. Proffitt ( Perspectives on Psychological Science 1 :110–122, 2006 ) argued that explicit perception of the slant of a climb allows individuals to plan locomotion in keeping with their available locomotor resources, yet no behavioral evidence supports this contention. Pedestrians in a built environment can often avoid climbing stairs, the man-made equivalent of steep hills, by choosing an adjacent escalator. Stair climbing is avoided more by women, the old, and the overweight than by their comparators. Two studies tested perceived steepness of the stairs as a cue that promotes this avoidance. In the first study, participants estimated the steepness of a staircase in a train station ( n = 269). Sex, age, height, and weight were recorded. Women, older individuals, and those who were heavier and shorter reported the staircase as steeper than did their comparison groups. In a follow-up study in a shopping mall, pedestrians were recruited from those who chose the stairs and those who avoided them, with the samples stratified for sex, age, and weight status. Participants ( n = 229) estimated the steepness of a life-sized image of the stairs they had just encountered, presented on the wall of a vacant shop in the mall. Pedestrians who avoided stair climbing by choosing the escalator reported the stairs as steeper even when demographic differences were controlled. Perceived steepness may to be a contextual cue that pedestrians use to avoid stair climbing when an alternative is available.
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Age Factors
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Behavior
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Biological and medical sciences
Body Height
Body Weight
Brief Report
Cognitive Psychology
Demographics
Elevators & escalators
Estimates
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Influence
Male
Middle Aged
Motor Activity - physiology
Perception
Psychology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Public access
Sex Factors
Space Perception - physiology
Studies
Vision
Young Adult
title Does perceived steepness deter stair climbing when an alternative is available?
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