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Trond Nordfjærn

Researcher at Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Publications -  113
Citations -  2691

Trond Nordfjærn is an academic researcher from Norwegian University of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Population. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 109 publications receiving 1980 citations. Previous affiliations of Trond Nordfjærn include Gediz University & Norwegian Institute for Alcohol and Drug Research.

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The value-belief-norm theory, personal norms and sustainable travel mode choice in urban areas

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate whether the value-belief-norm theory can explain reported travel mode change in the Norwegian urban population, based on a self-completion questionnaire survey carried out among representative samples in six urban areas in Norway.
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The role of attitudes, transport priorities, and car use habit for travel mode use and intentions to use public transportation in an urban Norwegian public

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify clusters of transport users and examine the role of transport priorities, travel mode use attitudes, and car use habit on travel modes use, and test whether such factors predict intentions to use public transport and reported use of public transport.
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A cross‐cultural comparison of road traffic risk perceptions, attitudes towards traffic safety and driver behaviour

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated cross-cultural differences in road traffic risk perception, risk sensitivity and risk willingness in Norway, Russia, India, Ghana, Tanzania and Uganda and examined differences in driver attitudes and driver behaviour.
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The role of risk perception and other risk-related judgements in transportation mode use

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the role of risk perception in use of private and public modes of transportation and investigated differences in worry, perceived control of transportation modes, as well as trust in authorities' risk handling, safety motivation, and attitudes towards transport safety.
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Relapse after inpatient substance use treatment: A prospective cohort study among users of illicit substances

TL;DR: Results of multivariable analysis showed that younger age and having a psychiatric diagnosis were associated with an elevated relapse risk, and identifying the treatment needs of young patients and patients with co-occurring psychiatric diagnoses during and following inpatient SUD treatment may contribute to reduced post-treatment relapse rates.