Effects of parental vigilant care and feedback on novice driver risk.

Author(s)
Shimshoni, Y. Farah, H. Lotan, T. Grimberg, E. Dritter, O. Musicant, O. Toledo, T. & Omer, H.
Year
Abstract

Vigilant care aims at reducing adolescent risk behaviors while matching parental involvement to the level of alarm signs. This study examined the effect of parent training in vigilant care and technological feedback on driving risk of novice male drivers. A sample of 217 Israeli families was divided into four conditions: a) no-feedback, b) individual feedback, c) family feedback, and d) family feedback plus parent training in vigilant care. Feedback and risk assessment were conducted through in-vehicle data recorders. A significant difference was found in favor of the vigilant care group compared to the no feedback group. When only the drivers in the high risk percentiles were considered, the vigilant care group was found superior to the family feedback group. The findings suggest that parental training in vigilant care may help reduce driving risk. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
20210118 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Journal of Adolescence, Vol. 38 (January 2015), p. 69-80, 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.