Caution behaviour and its conditioning in driving.

Author(s)
Parsons, H.M.
Year
Abstract

If people drove more cautiously, there might be fewer accidents. Caution behaviour includes pausing and looking. It is suggested that the ''precautionary pause'' based on a longer response latency and reduced force can be conditioned into drivers as avoidance behaviour. In laboratory research that can be constructed as simulation of driving, latencies were lengthened and forces diminished because of the contingencies of an aversive consequence.

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Publication

Library number
B 11991 T /83/ IRRD 222288
Source

Human Factors, Vol. 18 (1976), No. 4 (August), p. 397-408, 3 graph., 36 ref.

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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.