Measurement of pedestrian behavior : a handbook for identifying the behaviors to measure and the measurement systems for use in countermeasure evaluation.

Author(s)
Rose, A.M. Levine, H.M. & Eisner, E.J.
Year
Abstract

The handbook presents, in concise fashion, recommendations as to specific pedestrian, driver, and vehicle behaviors to be studied and measured in order to assess the effectiveness of each of 24 proposed potential countermeasures as they relate to each of 11 common accident types. Further, the handbook provides information regarding the selection of cost-effective measurement systems to be used for the purpose of behavioral measurement. The handbook is designed for use by both researchers in highway safety and non-technically oriented local traffic safety officials. For the researchers, the handbook contains the methodological detail necessary to stipulate the behaviors which should be studied for any proposed countermeasure which is being considered for possible implementation, and the bases for choosing among alternative measurement systems to be employed in the assessment of those behaviors. For the traffic safety official, the handbook provides a simple means of determining the critical behaviors to be measured for a wide variety of accident by countermeasure situations and the best of several measuring instruments to be used.

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Publication

Library number
B 18317 MF [electronic version only]
Source

Washington, D.C., American Institutes for Research, 1976, 106 p., fig., graph., tab., ref.; DOT HS 803 263

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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.