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Journal Article

Citation

de Winter JCF, Kyriakidis M, Dodou D, Happee R. Int. Conf. Appl. Human Factors Ergonomics Proc. 2015; 3: 2518-2525.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, AHFE International, Publisher Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1016/j.promfg.2015.07.514

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Crowdsourcing is a promising approach for Human Factors survey research. We explored the use of a relatively new crowdsourcing platform called CrowdFlower. Our survey focused on the relationship between self-reported traffic accidents and violations measured with the Driver Behaviour Questionnaire (DBQ). We obtained 1,862 responses within 20hours at a cost of $247. The demographic correlates of DBQ violations were consistent with those of traditionally recruited samples. The correlation between DBQ violations and self-reported accidents was ρ =.28. Self-reported accidents at the national level (N = 18 countries) correlated strongly (ρ =.68/.79) with accident statistics published by the World Health Organization. Large international differences were observed, with horn honking being relatively common in India and Indonesia and speeding being common in some Western countries. We conclude that CrowdFlower is an efficient tool for conducting international surveys.


Language: en

Keywords

CrowdFlower; Crowdsourcing; Driver Behaviour Questionnaire; traffic accidents; traffic violations

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