Aberrant Riding Behavior of Food Delivery Riders-Model

Aberrant Riding Behavior of Food Delivery Riders-Model

CategoryDetails
DescriptionThe Aberrant Riding Behavior of Food Delivery Riders Model (Qian, He, & Shi, 2024) was developed to investigate the influence of safety knowledge on food delivery riders’ aberrant riding behaviors. Additionally, it examines the role of safety attitudes and risk perceptions in this influence process. Items were adapted from prior studies (Wang et al., 2018; Nguyen-Phuoc et al., 2020; Jamil et al., 2021). The measure was administered to adult participants in China, and findings related to factor structure, reliability, and validity were reported.
AuthorQian, Qian; He, Junyi; Shi, Jing
ORCIDNot available
AffiliationTsinghua University, Department of Civil Engineering
Email[email protected]
Correspondence AddressShi, Jing: [email protected]
PurposeTo assess aberrant riding behavior among food delivery riders.
ConstructAberrant Riding Behavior; Food Delivery Riders; Safety Attitudes; Risk Perceptions
Instrument TypeInventory/Questionnaire
Test TypeOriginal
Administration MethodElectronic
FormatItems rated on a 5-point Likert-type scale.
Number of Items31
Factors and SubscalesScales: Safety Knowledge (SA); Safety Attitude (Safety Attitudes toward Responsibility (SA-r); Safety Attitudes toward Laws (SA-l)); Risk Perception (General Violations; Distraction and Mistakes; Aggressive Riding).
ReliabilityInternal Consistency: Cronbach’s α and CR values ranged from 0.706 to 0.944 and 0.836 to 0.934, respectively. Split-Half Reliability: Spearman-Brown coefficients for SA-l and RP-p were 0.804 and 0.821, respectively.
ValidityConvergent and Discriminant Validity: AVE values exceeded 0.5, confirming strong convergent validity. Discriminant validity was tested using the Fornell-Larcker method, with diagonal values exceeding corresponding row and column values.
Factor AnalysisExploratory and Confirmatory Factor Analysis: The safety knowledge, safety attitude, and risk perception scales were analyzed together in an EFA. The total variance explained by these scales exceeded 60%, with KMO values of 0.821 and 0.912, indicating a valid factor structure. The validated CFA model showed good fit (Chi-square/DF = 1.929 < 3, RMSEA = 0.064 < 0.08, CFI = 0.916 > 0.9, IFI = 0.917 > 0.9, TLI = 0.904 > 0.9).
Test MethodologyTest Validity; Convergent Validity; Discriminant Validity; Test Reliability; Internal Consistency; Split-Half Reliability; Factor Analysis; Confirmatory Factor Analysis; Exploratory Factor Analysis; Measurement Model
Population DetailsLocation: China Respondents: Adults
Age GroupAdulthood (18+ years); Young Adulthood (18-29 years); Thirties (30-39 years); Middle Age (40-64 years)
KeywordsAberrant Riding Behavior; Aggressive Riding; Distraction and Mistakes; Electronic Bikes; Food Delivery Bikes; General Violations; Risk Perception; Safety Attitudes toward Laws; Safety Attitudes toward Responsibility; Safety Knowledge
Index TermsDriving Behavior; Food; Knowledge Level; Risk Perception; Transportation Safety; Hospitality Industry; Human Factors Measures; Cycling
FilesNo file available for download.
ReferenceQian, Q., He, J., & Shi, J. (2024). Analysis of factors influencing aberrant riding behavior of food delivery riders: A perspective on safety attitude and risk perception. Transportation Research Part F: Traffic Psychology and Behaviour, 100, 273–288. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trf.2023.12.007

Cite this article

Mohammed looti (2026). Aberrant Riding Behavior of Food Delivery Riders-Model. PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES. Retrieved from https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/aberrant-riding-behavior-of-food-delivery-riders-model-2/

Mohammed looti. "Aberrant Riding Behavior of Food Delivery Riders-Model." PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES, 4 Apr. 2026, https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/aberrant-riding-behavior-of-food-delivery-riders-model-2/.

Mohammed looti. "Aberrant Riding Behavior of Food Delivery Riders-Model." PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES, 2026. https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/aberrant-riding-behavior-of-food-delivery-riders-model-2/.

Mohammed looti (2026) 'Aberrant Riding Behavior of Food Delivery Riders-Model', PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES. Available at: https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/aberrant-riding-behavior-of-food-delivery-riders-model-2/.

[1] Mohammed looti, "Aberrant Riding Behavior of Food Delivery Riders-Model," PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES, vol. X, no. Y, ص Z-Z, April, 2026.

Mohammed looti. Aberrant Riding Behavior of Food Delivery Riders-Model. PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES. 2026;vol(issue):pages.

Slide Up
x
PDF
Scroll to Top