Evaluation of the impact of pedestrian countdown signals on crossing behavior

Hui Xiong*, Lingli Xiong, Xiaoyong Deng, Wuhong Wang

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The objective of this research is to evaluate the impact of pedestrian countdown signals on crossing behavior at intersections. Data were collected by means of questionnaire and video recording at two signalized intersections: one was with pedestrian countdown signal and the other was with traditional signal. The questionnaire aims to reveal pedestrians' preference to countdown signals. It shows that 91.8% of pedestrians believe that countdown signals are helpful in determining the time to enter crosswalk, and 72.6% of pedestrians think that countdown signals are more comfortable for crossing. To evaluate effects of countdown signals, four measures of effectiveness, that is, proportion of compliers, adventurers, violators, and trapped pedestrians, are applied. Hypothesis testing results show that countdown signals can significantly increase proportions of compliers and reduce proportions of violators and trapped pedestrians compared with traditional signals. However, countdown signals have weak impact on adventurers since many pedestrians do not understand the meaning of flashing signal.

Original languageEnglish
Article number518295
JournalAdvances in Mechanical Engineering
Volume2014
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

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