“…Other strategies to assess children's risk-taking use simulation. Several laboratories have simulated risk situations with virtual reality (e.g., pedestrian street-crossing among children aged 7 to 9; Dixon et al, 2020;Morrongiello et al, 2015;Schwebel et al, 2008Schwebel et al, , 2014Schwebel et al, , 2016 or with short vignettes, stories, or dollhouse simulations, usually among children ranging from 3 to 10 years old, that assess intended rather than actual risk-taking (e.g., Morrongiello & Rennie, 1998;Schwebel et al, 2011;Shen et al, 2016). Both virtual reality (Schwebel et al, 2008) and laboratory replications with stories or dollhouse scenarios (Morrongiello, Schwebel, et al, 2013) have demonstrated convergence with real-world behaviors.…”