Attentional control, high intensity pleasure, and risky pedestrian behavior in college students.

Author(s)
Schwebel, D.C. Stavrinos, D. & Kongable, E.M.
Year
Abstract

Individual differences in temperament and personality are closely linked to motor vehicle safety. However, 13% of Americans who die in transportation-related injuries are not killed in motor vehicle crashes, but rather inpedestrian injuries. This study was designed to study links between two individual difference measures, attentional control and high intensity pleasure, and pedestrian injury risk among college students, a group at particular risk of pedestrian injury. A sample of 245 students completed a temperament questionnaire and engaged in a street-crossing task within an interactive, immersive virtual pedestrian environment. Individuals scoring highon attentional control (the capacity to focus and shift attention, one facet of conscientiousness) waited longer to choose gaps to cross within andshowed some tendency to choose larger gaps after waiting. Individuals scoring high in high intensity pleasure (the tendency to desire novel, complex, and varied stimuli, one facet of sensation-seeking) were more likely toexperience collisions with traffic in the virtual environment. Theoretical and applied implications are discussed. (A) Reprinted with permission from Elsevier.

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Publication

Library number
I E142244 /83 / ITRD E142244
Source

Accident Analysis and Prevention. 2009 /05. 41(3) Pp658-661 (18 Refs.)

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.