ARE THEY REALLY SHORT CUTS? ESTIMATING SEAT BELT USE WITH SELF-REPORT MEASURES

Author(s)
STREFF, FM MICHIGAN UNIV, TRANSP RES INST, USA WAGENAAR, AC MICHIGAN UNIV, TRANSP RES INST, USA
Year
Abstract

The utility of estimating rates of automobile seat belt use withself-report measures was examined. Self-report measures overestimate belt use rates compared to observational surveys of the same population. laws mandating seat belt use did not substantially affect thedegree to which self-reports are upwardly biased. It was found self-report measures overestimate observed belt use by 8.9 to 19.4 percentage points or by a factor of 1.2 to 2. The best estimate is that self-reported seat belt use rates be discounted by 12 percentage points to estimate actual belt use rates.

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Publication

Library number
I 826201 IRRD 9001
Source

ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION 1989 /12 E21 6 PAG:509-16 T10

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.