Road Users’ Behavior at Marked Crosswalks on Channelized Right-Turn Lanes at Intersections in the State of Qatar
Abstract
:1. Background
2. Literature Review
3. Users’ Behavior at Marked Crosswalks
- Some pedestrians step down from the sidewalk onto the crosswalk and wait for a gap in the traffic stream. This sometimes compels drivers to yield;
- Sometimes, the pedestrian makes more than one attempt for initiating crossing. This occurs when drivers do not acknowledge the pedestrian’s right of way;
- Some pedestrians start crossing as soon as the approaching vehicle is seen and cross the crosswalk just after a vehicle has passed and before the next one arrives. This is rolling gap acceptance;
- Some pedestrians, who arrive running, maintain the same speed when on the crosswalk. This behavior can be risky, as the pedestrian might not have made accurate judgments about the speed or distance of oncoming vehicles; and
- Some pedestrians appear distracted when they cross. Examples include talking with companions while crossing in groups, using a mobile phone, carrying luggage, grooming, drinking or eating, reading, looking at the surrounding instead of oncoming traffic, searching their bags, carrying a bicycle or umbrella, holding a child’s hand, or pushing a stroller.
4. Data Collection
5. Data Overview
6. Pedestrian Behavior Analysis
6.1. Description of Data
6.2. Statistical Analyses
6.2.1. Waiting Behavior
6.2.2. Crossing Speed
6.2.3. Size of Accepted Gaps
6.2.4. Pedestrians’ Waiting Time Model
7. Driver Yielding Behavior Analysis
7.1. Driver Behavior with Respect to Pedestrians
7.1.1. Overview
7.1.2. Statistical Analysis
7.2. Driver Behavior Based on Vehicle Type
8. Discussion of Results
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Site Photos
Appendix B. Results of Statistical Analysis
Category | χ2 | p | Phi | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gender | 14.801 | 0.000 | −0.096 | Female pedestrians waited longer than male pedestrians |
Distraction | 11.144 | 0.001 | 0.083 | Distracted pedestrians waited longer compared to non-distracted pedestrians |
Group | 7.173 | 0.007 | 0.067 | Pedestrians crossing in groups waited longer compared to pedestrians crossing alone |
Crossing direction | 15.276 | 0.000 | −0.097 | Pedestrians crossing away from an intersection waited longer compared to pedestrians crossing at an intersection |
Age group | 0.242 | 0.886 | – | |
Traffic | 212.137 | 0.000 | 0.362 | Pedestrians facing traffic waited longer compared to pedestrians crossing without traffic or queued traffic |
Bag | 0.299 | 0.584 | – | |
Mobile_waiting | 4.111 | 0.043 | 0.05 | Pedestrians using mobile phones waited longer compared to pedestrians crossing without mobile phones |
Site variation | 90.395 | 0.000 | 0.236 | Pedestrians at the Al Rufaa intersection waited more and those at the Lekhwair intersection waited less compared to other sites. |
Dressing style | 8.299 | 0.040 | 0.072 | Pedestrians with casual clothes waited longer compared to pedestrians with other dressing styles |
Crossing location | 10.893 | 0.004 | 0.082 | Pedestrians crossing at a crosswalk waited longer compared to pedestrians crossing near or away from a crosswalk |
Category | Z | p | Comment |
---|---|---|---|
Gender | −2.798 | 0.005 | Female pedestrians waited 69.2% longer than male pedestrians. |
Crossing direction | −3.288 | 0.001 | Pedestrians crossing toward the intersection waited 43.8% longer than pedestrians crossing away from the intersection. |
Distraction | −2.8 | 0.000 | Distracted pedestrians waited 81.7% longer than non-distracted pedestrians. |
Group | −2.283 | 0.022 | Pedestrians crossing in groups waited 30.5% longer than pedestrians crossing alone. |
Mobile_waiting | −0.805 | 0.421 | – |
Bag | −1.215 | 0.224 | – |
Crossing location | 2.093 | 0.351 | – |
Age group | 20.746 | 0.000 | Children and older pedestrians waited longer than middle-aged pedestrians. |
Dressing style | 11.234 | 0.011 | Pedestrians wearing formal and worker clothes waited for less time than pedestrians dressed casually and traditionally. |
Site variation | 8.603 | 0.035 | Pedestrians waited the longest at the Al Meena intersection and the shortest at the Lekhwair intersection. |
Category | Z | p | Comment |
---|---|---|---|
Gender | −6.906 | 0.000 | Male pedestrians walked 13.45% faster than female pedestrians. |
Age group | 27.922 | 0.000 | Older pedestrians were the slowest and young pedestrians the fastest. |
Crossing direction | −3.457 | 0.001 | Pedestrians walked 3.42% faster when crossing away from an intersection. |
Distraction | −7.854 | 0.000 | Non-distracted pedestrians walked 12.64% faster than distracted pedestrians. |
Group | −7.483 | 0.000 | Pedestrians crossing alone walked 10.71% faster than pedestrians crossing in groups. |
Mobile_crossing | −1.019 | 0.308 | – |
Bag | −3.188 | 0.001 | Pedestrians crossing without bags walked 5.23% faster than pedestrians with bags. |
Crossing location | 4.98 | 0.083 | – |
Crossing path | 33.572 | 0.000 | Pedestrians crossing using oblique paths were faster than other pedestrians. |
Wait | −1.602 | 0.109 | – |
Conflict | −2.255 | 0.024 | Pedestrians crossing with conflict walked 2.57% faster than pedestrians crossing without conflict. |
Dressing style | 13.281 | 0.004 | Pedestrians wearing worker clothes were the fastest and pedestrians dressed traditionally were the slowest. |
Site variation | 160.576 | 0.000 | Pedestrians crossed at highest speeds at the Al Rufaa intersection. Pedestrians at the City center site had the lowest crossing speeds. |
Category | Z | p | Comment |
---|---|---|---|
Gender | −4.58 | 0.000 | Females accepted 23.4% larger gaps than males. |
Age group | 14.845 | 0.002 | Children required the largest gaps in traffic. Middle-aged and young pedestrians accepted the same average gaps. |
Crossing direction | −3.938 | 0.000 | Pedestrians crossing towards the intersection accepted 15.3% larger gaps than pedestrians crossing away from the intersection. |
Distraction | −3.247 | 0.001 | Distracted pedestrians accepted 33.9% larger gaps than non-distracted pedestrians. |
Group | −4.496 | 0.000 | Pedestrians crossing in groups accepted 19.8% larger gaps than pedestrians crossing alone. |
Mobile_waiting | −2.269 | 0.023 | Pedestrians without a mobile phone accepted 28.8% larger gaps than pedestrians crossing with a mobile phone. |
Bag | −2.747 | 0.006 | Pedestrians with bags accepted 18.5% larger gaps than pedestrians without bags. |
Crossing location | 0.144 | 0.931 | – |
Wait | −2.842 | 0.004 | Pedestrians who did not wait accepted 9.15% larger gaps compared with pedestrians who waited before crossing. |
Dressing style | 1.448 | 0.694 | – |
Site variation | 174.468 | 0.000 | The Al Meena site had the largest accepted gaps and the Al Rufaa intersection had the smallest accepted gaps. |
Category | χ2 | p | Phi | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gender | 4.397 | 0.036 | −0.067 | Drivers yielded more to female pedestrians than male pedestrians |
Distraction | 0.333 | 0.564 | – | – |
Group | 3.021 | 0.082 | – | – |
Crossing direction | 1.267 | 0.26 | – | – |
Age group | 3.76 | 0.052 | – | – |
Bag | 3.267 | 0.071 | – | – |
Mobile_waiting | 0.158 | 0.691 | – | – |
Site variation | 39.318 | 0.000 | 0.201 | Drivers at the Al Rufaa intersection yielded the most and drivers at the Al Meena intersections yielded the least compared with other sites |
Dressing style | 2.989 | 0.393 | – | – |
Crossing location | 1.845 | 0.397 | – | – |
Appendix C. Details of Distributions
Waiting time
Crossing speed
Accepted gap
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Land Use | Description |
---|---|
Commercial | Includes small- and medium-sized shops, restaurants, grocery stores, and general stores |
Commercial and offices | Includes large multi-storey shopping mall and government (ministry offices) in multi-story buildings |
Offices | Includes multi-story buildings with only offices having banks, government offices, and general post office |
Recreational | Includes parks and museums |
Site | Approach (Abbreviation) | Land Use | Cw | Cl (m) | T(°C) | Vv | Δhv Avg (min, max) (s) | Vp Observed (Used) | Δhp Avg (min, max) (s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Al Rufaa intersection | South-East (SE) | Commercial | 3.00 | 6.01 | 20–26 | 1692 | 5.29 (0.36, 62) | 839 (620) | 10.71 (0,165.64) |
City center intersection | North-West (NW) | Commercial & offices | 3.03 | 5.52 | 29–37 | 2289 | 7.52 (0.1, 72.2) | 465 (449) | 36.95 (0,349) |
Lekhwair intersection | North-East (NE) | Offices | 2.70 | 4.57 | 19–22 | 2693 | 14.58 (0.99,427.92) | 354 (280) | 113.32 (0,1129.20) |
Al Meena intersection | South-East (SE) | Recreational | 3.05 | 5.14 | 26–37 | 2722 | 16.23 (1.0,206) | 160 (126) | 272.25 (0,1954) |
South-West (SW) | 3.05 | 4.77 | 6162 | 6.95 (0.60,113.68) | 164 (145) | 251.93 (0.04,3639.36) |
Characteristic | Classification | Frequency | Proportion (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Gender | Male | 1422 | 87.8 |
Female | 198 | 12.2 | |
Age group | Children | 10 | 0.6 |
Young | 638 | 39.4 | |
Middle-aged | 943 | 58.2 | |
Elder | 29 | 1.8 | |
Dressing style | Formal | 357 | 22.0 |
Traditional | 120 | 7.4 | |
Casual | 1082 | 66.8 | |
Worker | 61 | 3.8 | |
Bag | Yes | 647 | 39.9 |
No | 973 | 60.1 | |
Group | Yes | 598 | 36.9 |
No | 1022 | 63.1 | |
Mobileuse_waiting | Yes | 95 | 5.9 |
No | 1525 | 94.1 | |
Mobileuse_crossing | Yes | 75 | 4.6 |
No | 1545 | 95.4 | |
Distraction | Yes | 364 | 22.5 |
No | 1256 | 77.5 | |
Total | 1620 |
Characteristic | Classification | Frequency | Proportion (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Crossing direction | Toward intersection | 867 | 53.5 |
Away from intersection | 753 | 46.5 | |
Crossing path | Perpendicular | 649 | 40.1 |
Oblique | 908 | 56.1 | |
Other | 63 | 3.9 | |
Crossing location | At crosswalk | 815 | 50.3 |
Near crosswalk | 466 | 28.8 | |
Away from crosswalk | 339 | 20.9 |
Characteristic | Average | Minimum | Maximum |
---|---|---|---|
Waiting time (s) | 3.84 | 0 | 132.36 |
Crossing speed (m/s) | 1.35 | 0.38 | 4.53 |
Accepted gap * (s) | 14.55 | 2.08 | 120.91 |
Number of conflicting vehicles faced | 1.19 | 0 | 26 |
Variable | Coefficient | SE | Significance | OR | 95% CI |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gender | 0.689 | 0.176 | 0.000 | 1.992 | 1.412–2.810 |
Distraction | 0.485 | 0.140 | 0.001 | 1.624 | 1.234–2.138 |
Crossing direction | −0.775 | 0.122 | 0.000 | 0.461 | 0.363–0.585 |
Pedestrians in opposite direction | 0.740 | 0.158 | 0.000 | 2.096 | 1.539–2.854 |
Conflict | 1.746 | 0.128 | 0.000 | 5.729 | 4.461–7.358 |
Land use | 0.000 | ||||
Offices | −1.003 | 0.193 | 0.000 | 0.367 | 0.251–0.535 |
Recreational | −1.032 | 0.185 | 0.000 | 0.356 | 0.248–0.512 |
Commercial and ofiices | −0.735 | 0.147 | 0.000 | 0.480 | 0.360–0.639 |
Constant | −1.052 | 0.142 | 0.000 | 0.349 |
Variable | Coefficient | Std Error | t-Statistic | Significance |
---|---|---|---|---|
Constant | 0.891 | 0.063 | 14.037 | 0.000 |
NoConVeh | 0.222 | 0.009 | 23.764 | 0.000 |
Crossing direction | −0.384 | 0.078 | −4.929 | 0.000 |
Age group | 0.241 | 0.064 | 3.787 | 0.000 |
Characteristic | Classification | Frequency | Proportion (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Driver yielding behavior with respect to pedestrians | Yes | 197 | 12.6 |
No | 776 | 47.5 | |
NA * | 647 | 39.9 | |
Driver yielding behavior based on vehicle type | Sedan | 116 (1056) | 10.98 |
SUV | 52 (509) | 10.21 | |
Bus/Truck | 11 (212) | 5.18 | |
Pickup vehicle | 12 (156) | 7.69 | |
Van/Taxi | 5 (182) | 5.44 | |
Motorcycle | 1 (10) | 10 |
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Muley, D.; Kharbeche, M.; Downey, L.; Saleh, W.; Al-Salem, M. Road Users’ Behavior at Marked Crosswalks on Channelized Right-Turn Lanes at Intersections in the State of Qatar. Sustainability 2019, 11, 5699. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11205699
Muley D, Kharbeche M, Downey L, Saleh W, Al-Salem M. Road Users’ Behavior at Marked Crosswalks on Channelized Right-Turn Lanes at Intersections in the State of Qatar. Sustainability. 2019; 11(20):5699. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11205699
Chicago/Turabian StyleMuley, Deepti, Mohamed Kharbeche, Lucy Downey, Wafaa Saleh, and Mohammed Al-Salem. 2019. "Road Users’ Behavior at Marked Crosswalks on Channelized Right-Turn Lanes at Intersections in the State of Qatar" Sustainability 11, no. 20: 5699. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11205699
APA StyleMuley, D., Kharbeche, M., Downey, L., Saleh, W., & Al-Salem, M. (2019). Road Users’ Behavior at Marked Crosswalks on Channelized Right-Turn Lanes at Intersections in the State of Qatar. Sustainability, 11(20), 5699. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11205699