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Pedestrians Accept Shorter Distances to Light Vehicles Than Dark Ones When Crossing the Street

Ilja T. Feldstein, Eli Peli

2020Perception17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Does the brightness of an approaching vehicle affect a pedestrian's crossing decision? Thirty participants indicated their street-crossing intentions when facing approaching light or dark vehicles. The experiment was conducted in a real daylight environment and, additionally, in a corresponding virtual one. A real road with actual cars provides high face validity, while a virtual environment ensures the scenario's precise reproducibility and repeatability for each participant. In both settings, participants judged dark vehicles to be a more imminent threat-either closer or moving faster-when compared with light ones. Secondary results showed that participants accepted a significantly shorter time-to-contact when crossing the street in the virtual setting than on the real road.

Topics & Concepts

DaylightPedestrianPedestrian crossingRepeatabilityComputer scienceBrightnessSimulationTransport engineeringPhysicsOpticsEngineeringMathematicsStatisticsVisual perception and processing mechanismsColor perception and designImpact of Light on Environment and Health
Pedestrians Accept Shorter Distances to Light Vehicles Than Dark Ones When Crossing the Street | Litcius