Meaning in Motion: A Semiotic Study of Traffic Signs in Davao City as the Language of Road Communication

Authors

  • Anne Nicole P. Prado Ateneo de Davao University Author
  • Gwyneth Angelika Torres Ateneo de Davao University Author
  • Kyla Carylle Galicia Ateneo de Davao University Author
  • Julianne Y. Garcia Ateneo de Davao University Author
  • Christine Faith M. Avila Ateneo de Davao University Author

Keywords:

semiotics,, traffic signs,, road communication,, driving culture, folk semiosis, Davao City

Abstract

This study investigates how drivers who have completed the Theoretical Driving Course (TDC) and Practical Driving Course (PDC), and those who have not, interpret traffic signs, pavement markings, and other road symbols within the road context of Davao City, Philippines. It explores how meaning is constructed and translated into driver compliance, viewing the road as a communicative field shaped by signs, culture, and interpretation. Guided by the semiotic theory of Ferdinand de Saussure (1916) and Yuri Lotman’s (1990) concept of the semiosphere, this qualitative study analyses how drivers and motorcyclists engage with both the mechanical and the semiotic language of the road. Data were generated through two complementary methods: focus group discussions (FGDs) with 12 purposively selected participants comprising TDC-PDC-trained and non-TDC-PDC drivers and motorcyclists, and live roadside interviews conducted with drivers navigating the actual roads of Davao City. The roadside interviews were essential in capturing how material traffic signs embedded in their physical environments, encountered under real driving conditions, and shaped by their visibility, placement, and spatial context, carry semiotic weight that abstract depictions cannot fully replicate. Findings reveal that formally trained drivers exhibit higher levels of semiotic awareness, interpreting colours, shapes, and symbols not merely as functional cues but as signifiers within a shared system of meaning. In contrast, untrained drivers relied more heavily on habit, intuition, and experiential knowledge, which emerged as a mode of engagement termed as folk semiosis. Crucially, however, folk semiosis is not the exclusive domain of the untrained drivers; even formally trained drivers negotiate this intuitive, experience-driven mode of sign-reading when navigating unfamiliar roads and terrain, where it functions additively to discipline and interpretation, sharpening alertness, deepening caution, and enriching their already-established semiotic competence. This study concludes that the road is not merely a space of transit but a living semiotic ecosystem where meaning, disciplined behaviour, and safety continuously intersect. Nonetheless, while untrained drivers who exercise genuine caution and self-taught discipline through folk semiosis can contribute meaningfully to orderly and smooth traffic flow, they must ultimately recognise that formal TDC and PDC training remains indispensable, not only for a deeper, legally grounded understanding of road and traffic signs, but for the fuller, more conscious participation in road safety that semiotic education can reliably produce.

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Author Biographies

  • Anne Nicole P. Prado, Ateneo de Davao University

    Anne Nicole P. Prado was a consistent dean’s and president’s lister during her university years. With that, she was able to secure her Grant Aid Scholarship every semester. As a result of her hard work, she graduated with a Magna Cum Laude Latin honour with her Bachelor of Arts in Communication degree at Ateneo de Davao University. Currently, she’s working as a Marketing and Operations associate at Little Toast, a local floral shop here in Davao City that caters to social events and curates intentional flower arrangements.

  • Gwyneth Angelika Torres, Ateneo de Davao University

    Gwyneth Angelika Torres is a Magna Cum Laude graduate of the Bachelor of Arts in Communication program at Ateneo de Davao University, recognised as a consistent Dean’s Lister and President’s Lister throughout her academic journey. With a strong background in communication, project coordination, and marketing, she is working with organisations such as Knowledge Channel Foundation, where she currently serves as a Project Coordinator, and Pristine Paradigm, in which she serves as a Marketing Associate. Gwyneth is passionate about using media and communication to inspire learning, build communities, and create meaningful impact.

  • Kyla Carylle Galicia, Ateneo de Davao University

    Kyla Carylle Galicia graduated Magna Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Arts in Communication from Ateneo de Davao University, where she was a consistent President’s Lister. Throughout her academic journey, she earned her skills in communication, creativity, and collaboration, which she continues to apply in her role as an Employee Welfare Specialist at Philippine Seven Corporation, organising events that foster employee engagement. Beyond her corporate career, Kyla is also a content creator, collaborating with fashion brands like Charles & Keith to share her passion for fashion and lifestyle.

  • Julianne Y. Garcia, Ateneo de Davao University

    Julianne Y. Garcia holds a degree in Bachelor of Arts in Communication from Ateneo de Davao University. She plays an important role in her undergraduate research, “Road Communication Interpretation: A Semiotic Analysis of Traffic Signs”, where she emphasises the crucial function of semiotics on the road for drivers & pedestrians. She currently works online as a Marketing & Community Engagement Coordinator for a private business in Hawai’i, where she hopes to be a valuable asset for their team and the organisation’s success.

  • Christine Faith M. Avila, Ateneo de Davao University

    Christine Faith M. Avila, DCOMM, (ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6204-1663), is an associate professor of the Communication Program at Ateneo de Davao University. Her journey and commitment as an Iskolar ng Bayan (scholar of the nation) significantly shaped her academic path and her dedication to social justice. Dr Avila is actively involved in communication research, internationalisation efforts, and community engagement. Before her stint as an educator, she worked as a marketing communications practitioner specialising in advertising and public relations (PR), handling advertising campaigns, public relations, and corporate events. She has experience managing internal and external communications for the banking and hospitality industries.

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Published

2026-05-24

How to Cite

Meaning in Motion: A Semiotic Study of Traffic Signs in Davao City as the Language of Road Communication. (2026). Simbolismo: Signs, Identities, Meanings, 2(2), 1-28. https://simbolismo.org/index.php/ssim/article/view/79

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