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Journal Article

Citation

Plant BRC, Reza F, Irwin JD. J. Australas. Coll. Road Saf. 2011; 22(4): 18-33.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Australasian College of Road Safety)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

systematic review of the methodologies used to empirically evaluate anti-speeding advertisements was conducted, and the advantages and limitations of these methods consolidated. Of the 28 studies that met the inclusion criteria, approximately equal proportions employed experimental (57%) and observational (43%] evaluation approaches. While the majority of observational evaluations of anti-speeding advertisements (N = 8, 29% of total evaluations) examined changes to direct measures of speeding (e.g., crash statistics, speeding infringements or on-road driving speeds), the majority of experimental evaluations (N = 12, 43% of total evaluations) relied on indirect measures of speeding behavior (e.g., self- reported anti-speeding attitudes, intentions, and behavior). The current review presents the strengths and limitations of previous evaluation approaches, with a particular focus on study design, outcome measures, and advertisement manipulations.

Keywords: Anti-speeding, Campaign, Design, Evaluation, Review, Road safety, Road safety advertising, Speeding


Language: en

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