Gender Differences in Predicting Unsafe Driving Behaviors in Young Adults.

Author(s)
Skaar, N.R. & Williams, J.E.
Year
Abstract

Past research has uncovered personality influences on dangerous driving behavior and vehicle crashes (Furnham & Saipe, 1993; Matthews, Dorn, & Glendon, 1991). Recently, females between 16 and 20 years of age showed an increase in overall crash rate, while males within the same age group showed a decrease in overall crash rate (NHTSA, 2004; NHTSA, 2002). Adolescent and young adult females have become a critical cohort in the study of unsafedriving behavior. The purpose of this study was to examine gender differences in risky driving behavior and personality influences on these behaviors. Data presented are first year cross-sectional results in a 5-year longitudinal study. Participants were 141 male and female drivers who completed the NEO PI-R, the DDDI and a driving behavior questionnaire. In addition, the driving record of each participant was obtained from the State Department of Transportation. Females reported a higher rate of traffic violations and crashes than males. No personality traits were significantly related to crashes, but Extroversion was positively related to total traffic violations within females. The DDDI scales were not significantly related totraffic violations or vehicle crashes, but gender differences were shown within the risky driving and aggressive driving scales. Gender differenceswere also shown in the relationship between personality traits and DDDI scales. This data indicates that researchers and insurance companies shouldmake an effort to consider females in their work. In addition, this studyprovides preliminary data on gender differences in personality as it relates to risky driving behavior.

Request publication

12 + 4 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

Publication

Library number
C 46841 (In: C 46824 [electronic version only]) /83 / ITRD E848601
Source

In: Driving Assessment 2005 : proceedings of the third international driving symposium on human factors in driver assessment, training and vehicle design, held Rockport, Maine, USA, June 27-30, 2005, 7 p.

Our collection

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