Transcript
Page 1: Psychology and Driver Safety

Psychology and Driver Safety

David L. Wiesenthal

SmartRisk

November 6, 2008

Page 2: Psychology and Driver Safety

What is an “accident”?

1. An unforeseen an unplanned event or circumstance.

2. An unfortunate event resulting especially from carelessness or ignorance.

Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary

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Conceptualizing “Accidents”

• Accidents don’t just happen

• Determinism versus fatalism: determinism is the scientific belief that events have a cause. Fatalism is the belief that mishaps are predestined by fate or supernatural forces

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Victim Blaming

• Bad drivers cause accidents.

• Stems from the belief that good things happen to good people and bad things happen to bad people.

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OUTCOME:Safe Trip

Or Mishap

Driver

Vehicle

Environment

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We often focus on only one aspect of this trinity, while

ignoring the others, along with the complexity of their

interrelationships.

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The Blind Men and the Elephant by John G. Saxe

snake?

tree?

wall?

Fan?

Rope?

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Conceptualizing Driving

• Human-machine system• Social system• Human-environment system• Environment-vehicle system• Competitive activity• Recreational activity• Expressive activity• Instrumental activity

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A useful way to conceptualize road safety is the journalist’s 5 Ws and and an H

• Who (driver)

• What (vehicle)

• Where (environment)

• When (time)

• Why (risk factors)

• How (description/analysis of the mishap)

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Who• Age• Gender• Previous driving offences• History of criminal offences• Frequency of driving• Driving licence classification• Stress level• Mood state• Learning history

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What

• Vehicle type

• Safety features of vehicle

• Mechanical fitness of vehicle

• Quality of lighting

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Where

• Location of mishap

• Type of roadway

• Quality/Clarity of signage

• Quality of road maintenance

• Presence of obstacles on roadway

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When

• Weather conditions

• Season

• Time of day

• Day of week

• Driver’s circadian rhythm

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Why• Driver inexperience• Driver inattention/distraction• Aggressive/vengeful driving• Alcohol/drug involvement• Poor visibility• Attempt to avoid road hazard• Excessive speed• Failure to signal intentions• Density of traffic may trigger antisocial

behaviours

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How

• Description/analysis of mishap

• Reconstruction of mishap

• Role of simulation

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Psychological Strategies for Reducing Mishaps: Norms

• Norms may not defined or perceived equally by all drivers

• Different driving “cultures” exist across a community

• Norms change over time in response to media influences, traffic volumes, enforcement, driver training, etc.

• Risky driving may be due in part to a lack of clear standards and informal norms

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Psychological Strategies for Reducing Mishaps: Behaviour

Modification

• To discourage one behaviour, encourage another

• Examine the rewards and costs of engaging in various behaviours

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Encouraging & Discouraging Behaviours: Examples

• Provision of free nonalcoholic beverages and pub food to designated driver

• Free public transportation all night during celebration evenings

• Free pub buses from university residences• Coupon distribution for taxi rides• Promotion of coffee houses rather than

alcohol culture on campus

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Media Effects on Driver Behaviour

• Frequent depictions of car chases and illegal racing in recent motion pictures. Hero is often portrayed as initiating the chases, engaging in reckless driving or pursuing others.

• Media might emphasize the role of alcohol in the causation of collisions and the failure to wear seatbelts

• Media has the power to influence attitudes and make drunk driving socially unacceptable

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Psychological Strategies for Reducing Mishaps

• Complex behaviour may have a variety of motivating factors, so no approach targeting a single factor is likely to eliminate all forms of risky driver behaviour.

• Changing the balance between rewards and costs in risky driving. What is the value of risk for those drivers?

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Risky Driving

Rewards:

• Fun, excitement, exhilaration

• Self definition as an adventurous person

• Display of competence

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Risky DrivingCosts:• Injury, death • Arrest/punishment--the perception of the

likelihood of apprehension rather than the severity of penalties may be more of a deterrent

• Property damage• Higher insurance costs• Loss of driver licence• Seizure of vehicle

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Psychological Strategies for Reducing Mishaps

• Change attitudes towards unsafe and aggressive driving

• Encourage stress reduction techniques

towards unacceptable behaviour• Role of the media in the modelling of both

positive and negative driving • Broaden the notion of the “problem driver”

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A variety of perspectives is most likely to yield positive results!

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Intervention Strategies

• Varied response may be necessary• Community level approach• Identify nature and extent of the problem• Interventions based upon the assessment of

the problem• Evaluate costs & benefits of the intervention

strategy• Design a programme evaluation prior to

implementation

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Intervention Strategies & Evaluation Research

• Analysis of the exact nature of the problem• Development of interventions/initiatives• Community involvement in the process• Defining the assessment measures• Cost/benefit analysis of the intervention• Publicizing the results of the intervention• Documenting the intervention


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