Effects of photoluminescent pathways on the emergency evacuation behaviours of commuters in underground MRT stations

This study examined the effects of photoluminescent pathways on the emergency evacuation behaviours of commuters in underground MRT stations. Undergraduate students (N = 48) were tested on an MRT simulation game where they were tasked to find the exit as quickly as possible. All participants were al...

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Main Author: Chianh, Jia Xuan
Other Authors: Xu Hong
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147788
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1477882023-03-05T15:43:35Z Effects of photoluminescent pathways on the emergency evacuation behaviours of commuters in underground MRT stations Chianh, Jia Xuan Xu Hong School of Social Sciences XUHONG@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology::Applied psychology This study examined the effects of photoluminescent pathways on the emergency evacuation behaviours of commuters in underground MRT stations. Undergraduate students (N = 48) were tested on an MRT simulation game where they were tasked to find the exit as quickly as possible. All participants were allocated to the control condition (i.e., absence of photoluminescent pathways) and four experimental conditions (i.e., presence of photoluminescent pathways). The photoluminescent pathways in the experimental conditions differed on two characteristics: design (e.g., arrowed vs. non-arrowed) and location (floor-mounted vs. wall-mounted). It was predicted that the presence of photoluminescent pathways would improve the durations taken by the participants to find the MRT exit and the durations may differ by the characteristics of the photoluminescent pathways. It was found that participants took a shorter duration in the experimental conditions as compared to the control condition. Furthermore, the participants took the shortest duration in the experimental condition with the arrowed and floor-mounted photoluminescent pathways. However, they preferred the experimental condition with the arrowed and wall-mounted photoluminescent pathways instead, suggesting a possible combination of floor-mounted and wall-mounted arrowed photoluminescent pathways in future MRT stations. Bachelor of Arts in Psychology 2021-06-15T03:08:58Z 2021-06-15T03:08:58Z 2021 Final Year Project (FYP) Chianh, J. X. (2021). Effects of photoluminescent pathways on the emergency evacuation behaviours of commuters in underground MRT stations. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147788 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147788 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology::Applied psychology
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology::Applied psychology
Chianh, Jia Xuan
Effects of photoluminescent pathways on the emergency evacuation behaviours of commuters in underground MRT stations
description This study examined the effects of photoluminescent pathways on the emergency evacuation behaviours of commuters in underground MRT stations. Undergraduate students (N = 48) were tested on an MRT simulation game where they were tasked to find the exit as quickly as possible. All participants were allocated to the control condition (i.e., absence of photoluminescent pathways) and four experimental conditions (i.e., presence of photoluminescent pathways). The photoluminescent pathways in the experimental conditions differed on two characteristics: design (e.g., arrowed vs. non-arrowed) and location (floor-mounted vs. wall-mounted). It was predicted that the presence of photoluminescent pathways would improve the durations taken by the participants to find the MRT exit and the durations may differ by the characteristics of the photoluminescent pathways. It was found that participants took a shorter duration in the experimental conditions as compared to the control condition. Furthermore, the participants took the shortest duration in the experimental condition with the arrowed and floor-mounted photoluminescent pathways. However, they preferred the experimental condition with the arrowed and wall-mounted photoluminescent pathways instead, suggesting a possible combination of floor-mounted and wall-mounted arrowed photoluminescent pathways in future MRT stations.
author2 Xu Hong
author_facet Xu Hong
Chianh, Jia Xuan
format Final Year Project
author Chianh, Jia Xuan
author_sort Chianh, Jia Xuan
title Effects of photoluminescent pathways on the emergency evacuation behaviours of commuters in underground MRT stations
title_short Effects of photoluminescent pathways on the emergency evacuation behaviours of commuters in underground MRT stations
title_full Effects of photoluminescent pathways on the emergency evacuation behaviours of commuters in underground MRT stations
title_fullStr Effects of photoluminescent pathways on the emergency evacuation behaviours of commuters in underground MRT stations
title_full_unstemmed Effects of photoluminescent pathways on the emergency evacuation behaviours of commuters in underground MRT stations
title_sort effects of photoluminescent pathways on the emergency evacuation behaviours of commuters in underground mrt stations
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147788
_version_ 1759854831468544000