군 운전자의 위험운전행동에 영향을 미치는 요인과 ADAS 효용성 인식의 조절효과
Factors Influencing Risky Driving Behavior Among Military Drivers: The Moderating Effect of Perceived ADAS Benefits
정지예(국방대학교 국방관리대학원); 백승령(국방대학교 국방관리대학원)
42권 4호, 163~181쪽
초록
This study investigates the determinants of risky driving behavior among military drivers and examines the moderating role of perceived benefits of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) within an extended Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) framework. Military driving is characterized by mission-oriented tasks, hierarchical decision-making, and frequent exposure to high-risk conditions; therefore, TPB-based findings from civilian contexts offer limited explanatory power for military drivers’ behavior. To address this limitation, the study incorporates risk sensitivity and aggressiveness as direct predictors, acknowledging that stable personality traits may exert immediate behavioral effects in demanding military environments. Survey data were collected from soldiers and officers with military driving experience, and structural equation modeling was conducted using SPSS 25.0 and AMOS 22.0. The results indicate that attitude, perceived behavioral control, and moral norm negatively influence risky driving intention, while intention positively predicts risky driving behavior. Risk sensitivity and aggressiveness also directly affect risky driving behavior. Furthermore, perceived benefits of ADAS strengthen the negative effects of TPB-related factors on risky driving intention, suggesting that favorable technology perceptions reinforce resistance to risky driving. Overall, this study integrates cognitive, dispositional, and technological factors into a unified framework and provides practical implications for military traffic safety policies beyond conventional training-based approaches.
Abstract
This study investigates the determinants of risky driving behavior among military drivers and examines the moderating role of perceived benefits of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) within an extended Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) framework. Military driving is characterized by mission-oriented tasks, hierarchical decision-making, and frequent exposure to high-risk conditions; therefore, TPB-based findings from civilian contexts offer limited explanatory power for military drivers’ behavior. To address this limitation, the study incorporates risk sensitivity and aggressiveness as direct predictors, acknowledging that stable personality traits may exert immediate behavioral effects in demanding military environments. Survey data were collected from soldiers and officers with military driving experience, and structural equation modeling was conducted using SPSS 25.0 and AMOS 22.0. The results indicate that attitude, perceived behavioral control, and moral norm negatively influence risky driving intention, while intention positively predicts risky driving behavior. Risk sensitivity and aggressiveness also directly affect risky driving behavior. Furthermore, perceived benefits of ADAS strengthen the negative effects of TPB-related factors on risky driving intention, suggesting that favorable technology perceptions reinforce resistance to risky driving. Overall, this study integrates cognitive, dispositional, and technological factors into a unified framework and provides practical implications for military traffic safety policies beyond conventional training-based approaches.
- 발행기관:
- 한국경영과학회
- 분류:
- 경영학