Effectiveness of consumer product warnings : design and forensic considerations.

Author(s)
Wogalter, M.S. & Laughery, K.R.
Year
Abstract

This chapter describes how warnings have two main purposes. First, they are a method of communicating important safety or safety-related information to a target audience who can then make better, more informed decisions regarding safety issues. Second, warnings are ultimately intended to reduce or prevent health problems, workplace accidents, personal injury, and property damage. Warnings can be in the form of signs, labels, product inserts and manuals, tags, audio- and videotapes, face-to-face verbal statements, and so forth. Printed warnings are generally text and graphics. Auditory warnings may be verbal or nonverbal. This chapter describes the factors that are generally applicable to all types of warnings, although examples are geared mostly toward visual warnings associated with products.

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Publication

Library number
C 45607 (In: C 45599) /83 / ITRD E839117
Source

In: Handbook of human factors in litigation, edited by Y.I. Noy & W. Karwowski, Boca Raton, FL, CRC Press, 2004, p. 31-1 - 31-11

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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.