DOI QR코드

DOI QR Code

보행자의 선호 보행방향에 관한 조사 및 분석

Survey and Analysis of Pedestrians' Preferences on Walking Directions

  • 정인주 (동신대학교 e-비지니스학과) ;
  • 정화식 (동신대학교 작업치료학과)
  • Jung, In-Ju (Department of e-business, Dongshin University) ;
  • Jung, Hwa-S. (Department of Occupational Therapy, Dongshin University)
  • 발행 : 2007.11.30

초록

Why do some countries walk on the right and others on the left? People have a dominant hand which leads to a natural tendency to favor one side of the road or another depending on the means of transportation being used. The primary objective of this study was to investigate the stereotype of Korean regarding preferred walking direction in encountering various facilities and provide the appropriate information to traffic policy makers. Six hundred Korean male and female subjects aging from 12 to 83 were selected to investigate the various statistics about their preferred walking direction and their employment characteristics on walking diverse facilities. The walking directions of eleven different facilities were asked along with other relative subjects' characteristics(e.g., age, gender, hand and foot dominance) to determine the relationship among these obtained data. The descriptive statistics showed that 73.7% and 26.3% were preferred walking right and left direction respectively. Moreover, various statistical analysis revealed that general tendency of walking direction was varied by hand and foot dominances. There were strong tendency that right-handed people prefer walking right side of the road and vise versa, hence this should be considered in setting up traffic policies. As a concluding remark, it is better to design traffic policies and regulations in the way that peoples' preference and expectation.

키워드

참고문헌

  1. Beadmore, A., The Revolving Door since 1881. In J. Steele, A. Gale(Ed),Architecture in Detail, Phaidon Press Inc., 2000
  2. Augustyn, C. and Peters, M., On the relation between footedness and handedness, Perceptual and Motor Skills, 63, 1115-1118, 1986 https://doi.org/10.2466/pms.1986.63.3.1115
  3. Barsley, M., Left-handed Man in a Right-handed World, London, Pitman, 1970
  4. Brown, E. R. and Taylor, P., Handedness, footedness, and eyedness, Perceptual and Motor Skills, 66, 183-186, 1988 https://doi.org/10.2466/pms.1988.66.1.183
  5. Jung, H. S. and Jung, Hyung-shik, Surveying and the ergonomic analysis of hand dominance, Journal of the Korean Institute of Industrial Engineers, 30(2), 165-174, 2004
  6. Kincaid, P., The Rule of the Road: An International Guide to History and Practice, Greenwood Press, 1986
  7. Lay M. G., Ways of the World: A History of the World's Roads and of the Vehicles That Used Them, Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, New Jersey, 1992
  8. Lucas, B., Which side of the road do they drive on?, http://www. brianlucas.ca/roadside/, 2005
  9. Previc, F. H. and Saucedo, J. C., The relationship between turning behaviour and motoric dominance in humans, Perceptual and Motor Skills, 75, 935-944, 1991
  10. Raitz, K. B., A Guide to the National Road, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Mary Land, 1996
  11. The United Nations Convention, Road Traffic, Article 9(1), 1949