To what extent can theory account for the findings of road safety evaluation studies?

Auteur(s)
Elvik, R.
Jaar
Samenvatting

This paper proposes a conceptual framework that can be used to assess the extent to which the findings of road safety evaluation research make sense from a theoretical point of view. The effects of road safety measures are modelled as passing through two causal chains. One of these, termed the engineering effect, refers to the intended effects of a road safety measure on a set of risk factors related to accident occurrence or injury severity. The engineering effect of road safety measures is modelled in terms of eight basic risk factors, one or more of which any road safety measure needs to influence in order to have the intended effect on accidents or injuries. The other causal chain producing the effects of road safety measures is termed the behavioural effect, and refers to road user behavioural adaptations to road safety measures. The behavioural effect is related to the engineering effect, in the sense that certain properties of the engineering effect of a road safety measure influence the likelihood that behavioural adaptation will occur. The behavioural effect of a road safety measure is modelled in terms of five conditions that influence the likelihood that behavioural adaptation will occur. The eight generic risk factors representing the engineering effect of a road safety measure, and the five items representing the likelihood of behavioural adaptation, can be used as checklists in assessing whether or not the findings of road safety evaluation studies make sense from a theoretical point of view. At the current state of knowledge, a more stringent evaluation of the extent to which theory can explain the findings of road safety evaluation studies is, in most cases, not possible. For the covering abstract see ITRD E123193.

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Publicatie

Bibliotheeknummer
C 30581 (In: C 30580 [electronic version only]) /83 /80 /82 / ITRD E123194
Uitgave

In: Speed management strategies and implementation - planning, evaluation, behavioural, legal and institutional issues: proceedings of the 15th workshop of the International Cooperation on Theories and Concepts in Traffic Safety ICTCT, Brno, Czech Republic, October 23-25, 2002, p. 9-24, ref.

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