Moon-boot foot syndrome.

markers were then moved a series of standard distances apart, relative to the actual size of the subject's car. The average percentage error was calculated, for both body width and gap width, on each subject's responses. Subject's body weights and heights were also measured and recorded, as was the actual width of their car as reported by the manufacturer. Women were classified according to whether or not they were within the premenstrual week. Subjects also completed the Crown-Crisp Experiential Index, a measure of experiential status providing scores on six scales named respectively anxiety, phobic, obsessionality, psychosomatic, depression, and hysteria.3 Also recorded were age of car, duration of ownership, and period driving licence held. For analysis of data on continuous variables Pearson's correlations were used. For ordinal variations Kendall's tau was used. For analyses bearing on the hypothesis, significances were sought at the one-tailed level.

[1]  A H Crisp,et al.  Aspects of the perceptual disorder in anorexia nervosa. , 1974, The British journal of medical psychology.

[2]  T A Betts,et al.  Effect of two hypnotic drugs on actual driving performance next morning. , 1982, British medical journal.