Kira Hyldekær Janstrup
Technical University of Denmark
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Featured researches published by Kira Hyldekær Janstrup.
Traffic Injury Prevention | 2016
Kira Hyldekær Janstrup; Sigal Kaplan; Tove Hels; Jens Lauritsen; Carlo Giacomo Prato
ABSTRACT Objective: This study aligns to the body of research dedicated to estimating the underreporting of road crash injuries and adds the perspective of understanding individual and crash factors contributing to the decision to report a crash to the police, the hospital, or both. Method: This study focuses on road crash injuries that occurred in the province of Funen, Denmark, between 2003 and 2007 and were registered in the police, the hospital, or both authorities. Underreporting rates are computed with the capture–recapture method, and the probability for road crash injuries in police records to appear in hospital records (and vice versa) is estimated with joint binary logit models. Results: The capture–recapture analysis shows high underreporting rates of road crash injuries in Denmark and the growth of underreporting not only with the decrease in injury severity but also with the involvement of cyclists (reporting rates of about 14% for serious injuries and 7% for slight injuries) and motorcyclists (reporting rates of about 35% for serious injuries and 10% for slight injuries). Model estimates show that the likelihood of appearing in both data sets is positively related to helmet and seat belt use, number of motor vehicles involved, alcohol involvement, higher speed limit, and females being injured. Conclusions: This study adds significantly to the literature about underreporting by recognizing that understanding the heterogeneity in the reporting rate of road crashes may lead to devising policy measures aimed at increasing the reporting rate by targeting specific road user groups (e.g., males, young road users) or specific situational factors (e.g., slight injuries, arm injuries, leg injuries, weekend).
Archive | 2017
Kira Hyldekær Janstrup
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Policing-an International Journal of Police Strategies & Management | 2017
Kira Hyldekær Janstrup; Sigal Kaplan; Michael Bruhn Barfod; Carlo Giacomo Prato
Purpose The phenomenon of traffic crash under-reporting has been extensively documented in terms of its extent, but not equally analysed in terms of its reasons. As police distrust has been recently identified as a major reason for crash under-reporting, the purpose of this paper is to look at the police service quality for handling the reporting of traffic crashes. Design/methodology/approach This study introduces a novel approach to evaluate service quality that combines multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) with latent class analysis (LCA). Moreover, this study presents the design of a web-based survey on the basis of the SERVQUAL approach to detecting strengths, opportunities and threats with crash reporting to the police at a strategic level. Transportation stakeholders (e.g. researchers, authorities, consultants, NGO representatives, suppliers) with an interest in traffic safety in Denmark participated in the survey that yielded 86 complete responses. Findings The novel approach was successfully applied and its implementation demonstrated the usefulness of the tool even in countries with a high police service. Results showed that the participating stakeholders perceived human factors as more important than physical factors in order to increase the crash reporting, with responsiveness as the most important and tangibles as the least important dimensions. Nevertheless, most stakeholders viewed a mixture of human and physical factors as crucial to increase crash reporting rates. Originality/value This study advances the knowledge about police service quality with a novel expert-based decision support tool based on SERVQUAL, MCDA and LCA, demonstrates its applicability in countries with a high-police service, and opportunities and barriers for increasing the crash reporting rate.
International Journal of Sustainable Transportation | 2018
Sigal Kaplan; Igor Mikolasek; Hana Bruhova Foltynova; Kira Hyldekær Janstrup; Carlo Giacomo Prato
Abstract Cycling-inclusive urban planning is attracting attention worldwide because of the environmental, health, economic, and transport benefits inherent to cycling from the individual and the societal perspectives. The Czech Republic is one of the emerging cycling countries that are trying to promote and support cycling, but cycling mode shares are low because of the poor quality of the scarce infrastructure and the psychological barrier of the perceived lack of safety when cycling in mixed traffic. This study takes a multimodal approach based on the Theory of Planned Behaviour and focuses on the factors underlying the willingness to share the road from the perspective of cyclists and drivers: positive attitudes toward cycling, positive attitudes toward cyclists’ behavior, social norms toward cycling and anxiety to share the road. A web-based questionnaire was tailor-designed and administered in the Czech Republic via social networks, web forums, and the Civinet network, and a hybrid bivariate-ordered model tested the behavioral framework. Results show that the willingness to share the road as a cyclist or as a driver relates positively to positive attitudes towards cycling and cyclists’ behavior, and negatively to the anxiety of sharing the road. Moreover, mediator effects are observed and a clear relation emerges between the experience on the road as both a cyclist and a driver on the willingness to share the road as a cyclist. Lastly, results show that the factors underlying road sharing intentions are related significantly to gender, travel habits, and perceived personal and infrastructure-related barriers to cycling.
Archive | 2011
Sjoerd Houwing; M.P. Hagenzieker; Rene Mathijssen; Inger Marie Bernhoft; Tove Hels; Kira Hyldekær Janstrup; Trudy Van der Linden; Sara-Ann Legrand; Alain Verstraete
Transportation Research Part F-traffic Psychology and Behaviour | 2017
Sigal Kaplan; Kira Hyldekær Janstrup; Carlo Giacomo Prato
Archive | 2010
Inger Marie Bernhoft; Gitte Carstensen; Simon Kærup; Tove Hels; Kira Hyldekær Janstrup; Niels Buus Kristensen; Arne Carlsson; Jörgen Larsson
Transportation Research Board 96th Annual MeetingTransportation Research Board | 2017
Sigal Kaplan; Igor Mikolasek; Hana Bruhova; Kira Hyldekær Janstrup; Carlo Giacomo Prato
Selected Proceedings from the Annual Transport Conference at Aalborg University | 2017
Kira Hyldekær Janstrup; Mette Møller; Ninette Pilegaard
Archive | 2017
Mette Møller; Mikkel Bøg Clemmensen; Kira Hyldekær Janstrup