Communicating a safety-critical limitation of an infant-carrying product : the effect of product design and warning salience.

Author(s)
Frantz, J.P. & Miller, J.M.
Year
Abstract

A field experiment was conducted to determine how the features of a product and the salience of its warnings affect potential purchasers' perception of a safety-critical product attribute. The experimental product was an infant carrier, which represents a class of products known to be inappropriately used as infant car seats. Sixty-two subjects were asked to examine and select an infant car seat/carrier product from a group of four infant-carrying products. Dependent measures included the subjects' knowledge that the experimental product was not designed to protect an infant in an auto accident and their attention to various warnings. Removing a potentially confusing product feature did not significantly reduce the protortion of subjects who mistakenly thought the product was designed for use as a car seat. However, collectively, the features of the product prompted more than a third of the subjects to incorrectly assess the safety-critical limitations of the product. Increasing the warning's salience signficantly increased the proportion of subjects who noticed and read it, but only in the most conspicuous condition was there an increase in the proportion of subjects who correctly recognized the product's limitations.

Publication

Library number
941118 ST [electronic version only]
Source

International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics, Vol. 11 (1993), No. 1 (January), p. 1-12 17 ref.

Our collection

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