@techreport{NeukumWalterSchumacheretal.2006, author = {Neukum, Alexandra and Walter, Martina and Schumacher, Markus and Kr{\"u}ger, Hans-Peter}, title = {Trainingskonzeption und Evaluation des Moduls A: "Gefahrenkognition" (Projekt: Simulation von Einsatzfahrten im Auftrag des Pr{\"a}sidiums der Bayerischen Bereitschaftspolizei, Abschlussbericht - Teil I)}, organization = {Interdisziplin{\"a}res Zentrum f{\"u}r Verkehrswissenschaften an der Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-77833}, year = {2006}, abstract = {Mit dem Ziel der Optimierung der bestehenden polizeilichen Fahrausbildung hat das Pr{\"a}sidium der Bayerischen Bereitschaftspolizei im Jahr 2001 ein mehrj{\"a}hriges Pilotprojekt initiiert, in dem ein technologiegest{\"u}tztes und didaktisch begr{\"u}ndetes Ausbildungssystem entwickelt und erprobt werden sollte. Im Zentrum dieses Pilotprojekts stand die Frage der Anwendung moderner Simulationstechnologie in der Fahrausbildung. Inhaltliche Entwicklung und Projektevaluation oblagen dem IZVW. Das Pilotprojekt ist integriert in das Gesamtcurriculum der Fahrausbildung bei der Bayerischen Bereitschaftspolizei (Rager \& M{\"u}ller, 2000). Dieses basiert auf drei unterschiedlichen Ausbildungsbl{\"o}cken und umfasst insgesamt 93 Unterrichtseinheiten. Die Inhalte des dreistufigen Programms im Rahmen der Ausbildung f{\"u}r den mittleren Polizeivollzugsdienst sind gekennzeichnet als „Situations- und typenbezogenes Fahrtraining" (Stufe 1), „Sicherheitstraining mit Gefahrenlehre" (Stufe II) und „Gefahrentraining zur Bew{\"a}ltigung von Einsatzfahrten mit und ohne Inanspruchnahme von Sonder- und Wegerechten" (Stufe III). In dieser letzten Ausbildungsstufe ist das Pilotprojekt „Simulation von Einsatzfahrten" positioniert. Das verkehrswissenschaftliche Projekt setzte sich zum Ziel, in enger Zusammenarbeit mit polizeilichen Experten und Ausbildern eine an den Erfordernissen der beruflichen Praxis orientierte Ausbildungs- und Trainingskonzeption zu entwickeln und insbesondere die Anwendung der Simulationsmethodik innerhalb der Fahrausbildung zu evaluieren. Der vorliegende Text konzentriert sich als Teil der Abschlussdokumentation auf die Evaluation des Simulatortrainings. Dieses ist konzipiert als zentraler Bestandteil des inhaltlichen Moduls „Gefahrenkognition" und wird erg{\"a}nzt durch ein vorbereitendes computerbasiertes Training. Gegenstand dieses Berichts sind die Arbeiten zur Erfassung von Trainingsakzeptanz und Lernerfolg der Lerneinheit Gefahrenkognition. Hierzu wird zun{\"a}chst ein {\"U}berblick {\"u}ber aktuelle in der Literatur vorliegende Studien gegeben, die sich mit der Evaluation der Simulation als Lehrmethode in der Fahrausbildung besch{\"a}ftigen. Kapitel 3 gibt einen {\"U}berblick {\"u}ber die Inhalte des Moduls und den Aufbau der {\"U}bungen in CBT und Simulator. Fragestellungen, Konzeption und methodisches Vorgehen der Evaluationsuntersuchungen sind beschrieben in Kapitel 4. Die Darstellung der Ergebnisse erfolgt in den Abschnitten 5 bis 7.}, subject = {Verkehrssicherheit}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Walter2012, author = {Walter, Martina}, title = {A new methodological approach to assess drug driving - The German Smartphone Survey}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75283}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {The aim of the present piece of work was to give information about the frequency of psychoactive substances within the German driver population and to identify preventive and promotive circumstances of drug driving. Furthermore, a new methodological approach to gather and link data about the consumption of psychoactive substances and the mobility of drug users is shown. Traditionally, roadside surveys are conducted to estimate the prevalence of drug driving within a population. By the present study, an alternative method is introduced. In total, 195 drug users (mainly cannabis users) and 100 controls out of the normal driving population were queried for four weeks about their driving and drug consumption behaviour by a questionnaire that was deployed on smartphones. The prevalences of drug driving within the sample were extrapolated into representative values. Because the subjects reported all daily activities within the study-period, it was also possible to describe situations in which the subjects decided against driving under influence. Besides, relevant previous experiences, attitudes, the approval of legal regulations, other traffic-specific parameters, social influences and personality variables were queried. So, individual factors that are associated with drug driving can be specified. The results are integrated in a model that shows dependencies of different societal, behavioural and legal variables. They can serve as major input to the discussion on drug driving and can be of practical use for rehabilitation and prevention purposes. The results can be summarised as follows: - Compared to the results of a German roadside survey from 1994, the prevalences that are found within the present study seem pretty low. This finding is discussed and possible explanations for the described trend are lined out. Furthermore, the prevalences that were calculated in the present study are compared to current data from other European countries. - The results show differences between users and controls on several variables. The differences indicate that substance use impacts on the structuring of day-to-day life. Overall, the controls' days proceed more along a daily working routine than the users' (e.g. less mobility at night, more mobility at rush-hour, alcohol consumption mainly at nights out). - The individual extent to which drugs are consumed differs dependent on daytime, day of the week and kind of substance. Of course, these dependencies also influence the occurrence of drug driving. Other factors of influence on drug driving are the distance, the availability of alternative modes of transport as well as the presence of female companions. - Not everybody who uses drugs drives under the influence of drugs. A striking predictor for frequent drug driving and highly intoxicated driving is a high consumption, associated with risky consumption patterns and a low subjective feeling of impairment after drug consumption. - The subjects' attitudes towards drug driving and their beliefs about social norms largely go in line with the behaviour they engage in. Drug users have rather liberal attitudes towards drug use and driving under influence. - A possible deterrence effect of sanctioning and police enforcement and its dependence on the acceptance and awareness of the measures is delineated. - Only small effects are found when examining the objective impairment that is caused by drug use by a computer-based test battery. This result is critically discussed with regards to the operationalisation of the study groups. - Except from driving under influence, there is no evidence to suggest that DUI offenders also show problematic behaviour according to other traffic-related measures. - Parents and peers may have an influence as role models on the development of problematic behaviour. A good relationship between parents and children may have a positive impact on the development of conventional values and behaviour. - Drug use is associated with some crucial personality dimensions and drugs are often used to solve personal problems. A less precise but similar difference was found for users who commit many drives under influence compared to users who never or only sometimes drive under influence. Moreover, users marginally more often have psychological problems compared to controls. Finally, the strengths and weaknesses of the new methodological approach of data collection are discussed as well as the challenges that are faced when implementing it. All in all, it has proved to be a promising method and should serve as a standard to which future studies should aspire.}, subject = {Verkehrspsychologie}, language = {en} }