Tyrrell Richard A, Wood Joanne M, Carberry Trent P
Department of Psychology, Clemson University, 418 Brackett Hall, Clemson, SC 29634-1355, USA.
J Safety Res. 2004;35(5):483-90. doi: 10.1016/j.jsr.2004.06.004.
Most pedestrian fatalities occur at night. Although researchers have long understood that drivers have difficulty seeing pedestrians at night and that reflective clothing can dramatically enhance pedestrian conspicuity, the extent to which pedestrians understand these facts is unclear. This experiment quantified pedestrians' estimates of the ability of an approaching driver to recognize the presence of roadside pedestrians.
Ten younger and 10 older participants walked in place on the far shoulder of a closed-road circuit and pressed a button when they were confident that the approaching driver could first recognize that a pedestrian was present.
Pedestrians overestimated their visibility and dramatically underestimated the benefit of conspicuity treatments.
These results suggest that pedestrians fail to understand the magnitude of the nighttime conspicuity problem and the value of conspicuity treatments. Pedestrians may therefore unknowingly place themselves in danger at night.
These results underscore the need to educate pedestrians about the dangers of interacting with traffic at night and about treatments that increase their safety.
大多数行人死亡事故发生在夜间。尽管研究人员早就知道,司机在夜间很难看到行人,而反光衣物能显著提高行人的醒目程度,但行人对这些事实的了解程度尚不清楚。本实验量化了行人对接近的司机识别路边行人存在能力的估计。
10名年轻参与者和10名年长参与者在封闭道路环线的远侧路肩上原地行走,当他们确信接近的司机能够首先识别出有行人在场时,就按下按钮。
行人高估了自己的可见度,大大低估了醒目处理的益处。
这些结果表明,行人不了解夜间醒目问题的严重程度以及醒目处理的价值。因此,行人可能在夜间不知不觉地将自己置于危险之中。
这些结果强调了有必要教育行人夜间与交通互动的危险以及提高其安全性的处理方法。