Sensation seeking and detection of risky road signals: a developmental perspective.

Author(s)
Rosenbloom, T. & Wolf, Y.
Year
Abstract

The relevance of the construct of sensation seeking, particularly the motivation to seek thrill and adventure and to avoid boredom, to detection of danger on the road, in particular choices made in conditions of road dilemmas (e.g. road-crossing and amber-light), was examined. 412 participants, males and females, from three age groups - 7, 13 and 22 - completed Zuckerman's test of sensation seeking and were exposed to the following experiments: Virtual driving, road crossing and go-carting. In each experiment, participants were exposed individually to a series of road dilemmas, constructed according to the paradigm of signal detection. In each dilemma, a dichotomous choice was made: To do or not to do. Age- and gender-dependent responses and connections were obtained. Most noticeable is a risky shift in males' detection responses and an inverse trend in females. (Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
I E114571 /83 / ITRD E114571
Source

Accident Analysis & Prevention. 2002 /09. 34(5) Pp569-80 (67 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.