Internal locus of control moderates the effects of road-hostility on recalled driving behavior.

Author(s)
Gidron, Y. Gal, R. & Desevilya, H.S.
Year
Abstract

This study examined the main and interactive effects of road-hostility and driving internal locus of control on self-reported driving behavior. Ninety-five Israeli students (mean age = 25 years) anonymously completed scales assessing road-hostility, driving internal locus of control (DI), and the Speed and Deviance subscales of the Driving Style Questionnaire (DSQ-score). Only road-hostility was significantly correlated with DSQ-scores (r = .54). DI moderated the effects of road-hostility in relation to DSQ-scores: The association between road-hostility and DSQ-scores was larger among subjects with low than with high levels of DI. Finally, 64% of high-hostile low DI drivers were involved in an accident compared to only 29% of high-hostile high DI drivers. These results suggest that future studies need to examine the effects of increasing DI on the negative effects of road-hostility on driving behavior. The study's theoretical interpretations, application to accident-prevention and limitations are discussed. (Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
I E118831 /83 / ITRD E118831
Source

Transportation Research, Part F: Traffic Psychology And Behaviour. 2003 /06. 6f(2) Pp109-16 (20 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.