The efficacy of two warning-related factors to produce cautionary behavior in a chemistry laboratory task was examined. Experiment 1 compared the effects of a posted-sign warning and a within-instruction warning on behavioral compliance. The results showed that a warning embedded in a set of task instructions produced significantly greater compliance (the wearing of protective gear) than a similar, larger warning posted as a sign nearby. Experiment 2 reexamined the effect of location and also examined the influence of the presence versus absence of pictorials. The results of Experiment 2 confirmed the location effect of Experiment 1. No influence of pictorials was noted, although there was a nonsignificant increase in compliance when pictorials were added to the within-instruction warning. The results indicate that warning placement is important for eliciting behavioral compliance to safety messages. Explanations such as differences in field of view perceived relevance are discussed.
CITATION STYLE
Wogalter, M. S., Kalsher, M. J., & Racicot, B. (1992). Influence of location and pictorials on behavioral compliance to warnings. In Proceedings of the Human Factors Society (Vol. 2, pp. 1029–1033). Publ by Human Factors Soc Inc. https://doi.org/10.1177/154193129203601324
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