2014
DOI: 10.1093/jpepsy/jsu024
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Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Behavioral Interventions to Improve Child Pedestrian Safety

Abstract: Behaviorally based interventions improve children's pedestrian safety. Efforts should continue to develop creative, cost-efficient, and effective interventions.

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Cited by 64 publications
(37 citation statements)
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References 34 publications
(30 reference statements)
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“…Evidence from our research program (Schwebel, McClure et al 2014;Schwebel et al 2016) and others (Thomson et al 2005) suggests, however, that children do have the capacity to learn pedestrian behavior if given sufficient repeated practice at the task, and that occasional children achieve adult functioning after the training tested in previous trials. This evidence parallels results from youth athletic training, where success derives from repeated practice at a complex cognitive-perceptual task with moving objects (Buszard et al 2014a(Buszard et al , 2014bPeper et al 1994).Another explanation for the results is that VR is not a suitable means to train children in pedestrian safety, and that training in streetside locations with actual traffic, laborious and expensive but probably effective (Schwebel, Barton, et al 2014), is essential to facilitate learning. A third explanation stems from methodological issues in the present study.…”
supporting
confidence: 64%
“…Evidence from our research program (Schwebel, McClure et al 2014;Schwebel et al 2016) and others (Thomson et al 2005) suggests, however, that children do have the capacity to learn pedestrian behavior if given sufficient repeated practice at the task, and that occasional children achieve adult functioning after the training tested in previous trials. This evidence parallels results from youth athletic training, where success derives from repeated practice at a complex cognitive-perceptual task with moving objects (Buszard et al 2014a(Buszard et al , 2014bPeper et al 1994).Another explanation for the results is that VR is not a suitable means to train children in pedestrian safety, and that training in streetside locations with actual traffic, laborious and expensive but probably effective (Schwebel, Barton, et al 2014), is essential to facilitate learning. A third explanation stems from methodological issues in the present study.…”
supporting
confidence: 64%
“…A recent systematic review of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) to teach children pedestrian safety uncovered 19 publications reporting 25 studies 9. Together, they indicate children's capacity to learn pedestrian skills.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A handful of published studies have considered ways to teach children relevant skills for safe pedestrian route selection (Schwebel et al, in press). The present research builds upon those studies.…”
Section: Training Children In Safe Pedestrian Route Selectionmentioning
confidence: 99%