Publication | Open Access
Feeling Safe in the Dark
123
Citations
26
References
2012
Year
Acceptability LevelsBehavioral SciencesPerceived SafetyGender StudiesBlocked EscapeAffective NeuroscienceSafety ScienceEnvironmental PsychologyHuman ConditionHuman SafetyBystander InterventionSocial SciencesPublic SafetyCrisis ManagementPsychologyTransport Safety
This research examined to what extent physical factors, notably lighting and entrapment (blocked escape), and individual factors, notably gender, affect feelings of safety and the acceptability of reduced lighting levels. The authors reasoned that acceptability of reduced street lighting depends on perceived safety, which in turn depends on entrapment, lighting, and gender. Virtual representations of a residential street were used, systematically manipulating entrapment and lighting levels. As expected, people felt less safe in lower lighting and higher entrapment settings, and these settings were evaluated as less acceptable. Although women perceived a situation as less safe compared with men, the authors found no gender differences in acceptability, which extends previous research. Importantly, as hypothesized, perceived safety mediated the effect of lighting on acceptability levels, suggesting that people can accept lower lighting levels when social safety is not threatened.
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