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posted by janrinok on Tuesday August 23 2016, @07:27PM   Printer-friendly
from the push,-pull,-swipe,-turn-and-Pong dept.

Late for work in Manhattan, you push the crosswalk button and curse silently at the slowness of the signal change. You finally get a green light, cross the street, arrive at the office, get in the elevator and hit the close door (>|<) button to speed things along. Getting out on your target floor, you find that hurrying has you a bit hot under the collar, so you reach for the thermostat to turn up the air conditioning.

Each of these seemingly disconnected everyday buttons you pressed may have something in common: it is quite possible that none of them did a thing to influence the world around you. Any perceived impact may simply have been imaginary, a placebo effect giving you the illusion of control.

In the early 2000s, New York City transportation officials finally admitted what many had suspected: the majority of crosswalk buttons in the city are completely disconnected from the traffic light system. Thousands of these initially worked to request a signal change but most no longer do anything, even if their signage suggests otherwise.

[...] Today, a combination of carefully orchestrated automation and higher traffic has made most of these buttons obsolete. Citywide, there are around 100 crosswalk buttons that still work in NYC but close to 1,000 more that do nothing at all. So why not take them down? Removing the remaining nonfunctional buttons would cost the city millions, a potential waste of already limited funds for civic infrastructure.

More examples are quoted in linked article, and some suggestions how tech can make our lives more pleasant while waiting - Pong anyone?.

http://99percentinvisible.org/article/user-illusion-everyday-placebo-buttons-create-semblance-control/

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 4, Informative) by Whoever on Wednesday August 24 2016, @03:38AM

    by Whoever (4524) on Wednesday August 24 2016, @03:38AM (#392447) Journal

    The jackass that decided that second one was a good idea and then that you had to press the button prior to the light changing or get no permission at all deserves to be stuck on the wrong side of the street while bad things happen to his children.

    That's only because the USA has dangerous traffic signal sequences. In many other countries, when the pedestrians can walk, no cars are allowed into the junction (from any direction). With this type of setup, you only want to signal for pedestrians to cross if there really are pedestrians waiting to cross.

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  • (Score: 1) by Francis on Wednesday August 24 2016, @04:33AM

    by Francis (5544) on Wednesday August 24 2016, @04:33AM (#392457)

    I've never seen that in the US. But that would cut down substantially on fatalities from people crossing in crosswalks being hit by traffic.

    Obviously, that wouldn't do anything about people in uncontrolled intersection, but it would be something to fight for.