The effects of training impulse control on simulated driving.

There is growing interest in young driver training that addresses age-related factors, including incompletely developed impulse control. Two studies investigated whether training of response inhibition can reduce risky simulated driving in young drivers (aged 16-24 years). Each study manipulated aspects of response inhibition training then assessed transfer of training using simulated driving measures including speeding, risky passing, and compliance with traffic controls. Study 1 (n = 65) used a Go/No-go task, Stop Signal Task and a Collision Detection Task. Designed to promote engagement, learning, and transfer, training tasks were driving-relevant and adaptive (i.e. difficulty increased as performance improved), included performance feedback, and were distributed over five days. Control participants completed matching "filler" tasks. Performance on trained tasks improved with training, but there was no significant improvement in simulated driving. Study 2 enhanced response inhibition training using Go/No-go and SST tasks, with clearer performance feedback, and 10 days of training. Control participants completed testing only, in order to avoid any possibility of training response inhibition in the filler tasks. Again performance on trained tasks improved, but there was no evidence of transfer of training to simulated driving. These findings suggest that although training of sufficient interest and duration can improve response inhibition task performance, a training schedule that is likely to be acceptable to the public does not result in improvements in simulated driving. Further research is needed to investigate whether response inhibition training can improve risky driving in the context of real-world motivations for risky driving.

[1]  Christina Gloeckner,et al.  Modern Applied Statistics With S , 2003 .

[2]  W. Renner,et al.  Venturesomeness and extraversion as correlates of juvenile drivers' traffic violations. , 2000, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[3]  J. Pekar,et al.  Meta-analysis of Go/No-go tasks demonstrating that fMRI activation associated with response inhibition is task-dependent , 2008, Neuropsychologia.

[4]  A. Jansen,et al.  Training inhibitory control. A recipe for resisting sweet temptations , 2011, Appetite.

[5]  Lucas Spierer,et al.  Training-induced behavioral and brain plasticity in inhibitory control , 2013, Front. Hum. Neurosci..

[6]  Linda Ng Boyle,et al.  Safety implications of providing real-time feedback to distracted drivers. , 2007, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[7]  Diva Eensoo,et al.  Preventing risky driving: A novel and efficient brief intervention focusing on acknowledgement of personal risk factors. , 2013, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[8]  Alan D. Baddeley,et al.  The influence of length and frequency of training session on the rate of learning to type. , 1978 .

[9]  Christine M. Wickens,et al.  Cognitive failures as predictors of driving errors, lapses, and violations. , 2008, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[10]  Mark S Horswill,et al.  Can a video-based hazard perception test used for driver licensing predict crash involvement? , 2015, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[11]  Aoife A Kervick,et al.  Psychological factors associated with indices of risky, reckless and cautious driving in a national sample of drivers in the Republic of Ireland. , 2013, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[12]  Esko Keskinen,et al.  DRIVER TRAINING IN FINLAND , 1999 .

[13]  F. Verbruggen,et al.  Proactive Motor Control Reduces Monetary Risk Taking in Gambling , 2012, Psychological science.

[14]  E. Quinlivan,et al.  Behavioral measures and self-report of impulsivity in bipolar disorder: no association between Stroop test and Barratt Impulsiveness Scale , 2016, International Journal of Bipolar Disorders.

[15]  John K. Ousterhout,et al.  Tcl and the Tk Toolkit , 1994 .

[16]  H. Aarts,et al.  Using stop signals to inhibit chronic dieters' responses toward palatable foods. , 2011, Behaviour research and therapy.

[17]  Ian Roberts,et al.  Post-licence driver education for the prevention of road traffic crashes: a systematic review of randomised controlled trials. , 2005, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[18]  N. Konstantinou,et al.  Risky and aggressive driving in young adults: Personality matters. , 2011, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[19]  C Raymond Bingham,et al.  Adolescent predictors of traffic crash patterns from licensure into early young adulthood. , 2005, Annual proceedings. Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine.

[20]  E. Kehoe,et al.  An examination of the relationship between measures of impulsivity and risky simulated driving amongst young drivers. , 2017, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[21]  Katrijn Houben,et al.  Resisting temptation: decreasing alcohol-related affect and drinking behavior by training response inhibition. , 2011, Drug and alcohol dependence.

[22]  Franck Vidal,et al.  Physiological evidence for response inhibition in choice reaction time tasks , 2004, Brain and Cognition.

[23]  D. McCarthy,et al.  Direct and indirect effects of impulsivity traits on drinking and driving in young adults. , 2012, Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs.

[24]  J. S. Johnson,et al.  Critical period effects in second language learning: The influence of maturational state on the acquisition of English as a second language , 1989, Cognitive Psychology.

[25]  Mark S Horswill,et al.  The development and validation of a hazard perception test for use in driver licensing. , 2011, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[26]  H M Simpson,et al.  The safety value of driver education an training , 2002, Injury prevention : journal of the International Society for Child and Adolescent Injury Prevention.

[27]  Julie Hatfield,et al.  The role of risk-propensity in the risky driving of younger drivers. , 2009, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[28]  Torkel Klingberg,et al.  Training and transfer effects of executive functions in preschool children. , 2009, Developmental science.

[29]  L. Steinberg A dual systems model of adolescent risk-taking. , 2010, Developmental psychobiology.

[30]  R. Schmidt,et al.  Transfer of Movement Control in Motor Skill Learning , 1986 .

[31]  M. Gormley,et al.  The contribution of inhibitory deficits to dangerous driving among young people. , 2013, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[32]  Timothy D. Lee,et al.  Motor Learning and Performance: From Principles to Application , 2013 .

[33]  P. Winne,et al.  Feedback and Self-Regulated Learning: A Theoretical Synthesis , 1995 .

[34]  S. Johnstone,et al.  Short-term training in the Go/Nogo task: behavioural and neural changes depend on task demands. , 2013, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[35]  Nils Petter Gregersen,et al.  FROM CONTROL OF THE VEHICLE TO PERSONAL SELF-CONTROL; BROADENING THE PERSPECTIVES TO DRIVER EDUCATION , 2002 .

[36]  M. Pearson,et al.  Impulsivity-like traits and risky driving behaviors among college students. , 2013, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[37]  David Crundall,et al.  Driving simulator validation with hazard perception , 2011 .

[38]  J. Patton,et al.  Factor structure of the Barratt impulsiveness scale. , 1995, Journal of clinical psychology.

[39]  Ryan C. Martin,et al.  Driving anger, sensation seeking, impulsiveness, and boredom proneness in the prediction of unsafe driving. , 2005, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[40]  Katrijn Houben,et al.  Chocolate equals stop. Chocolate-specific inhibition training reduces chocolate intake and go associations with chocolate , 2015, Appetite.

[41]  Susan M. Barnett,et al.  When and where do we apply what we learn? A taxonomy for far transfer. , 2002, Psychological bulletin.

[42]  Katrijn Houben,et al.  Overcoming the urge to splurge: influencing eating behavior by manipulating inhibitory control. , 2011, Journal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry.

[43]  B. Reynolds,et al.  Dimensions of impulsive behavior in adolescents: laboratory behavioral assessments. , 2008, Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology.

[44]  JaneR . Taylor,et al.  Developmental neurocircuitry of motivation in adolescence: a critical period of addiction vulnerability. , 2003, The American journal of psychiatry.

[45]  D. Detterman The case for the prosecution: Transfer as an epiphenomenon. , 1996 .

[46]  N P Gregersen,et al.  Young novice drivers: towards a model of their accident involvement. , 1996, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[47]  Kelli M Taylor,et al.  The effects of overlearning and distributed practise on the retention of mathematics knowledge , 2006 .

[48]  B. Molesworth,et al.  The Effect of Cognitive-Based Training Interventions on Driver Speed Management Behavior , 2015 .

[49]  Kylie Loveday,et al.  Neurocognitive training for children with and without AD/HD , 2012, ADHD Attention Deficit and Hyperactivity Disorders.

[50]  Goodman,et al.  The Interactive Effects of Task and External Feedback on Practice Performance and Learning. , 1998, Organizational behavior and human decision processes.

[51]  S. Dowsett,et al.  The development of inhibitory control in preschool children: effects of "executive skills" training. , 2000, Developmental psychobiology.

[52]  M. Fillmore,et al.  Acute effects of cocaine in two models of inhibitory control: implications of non-linear dose effects. , 2006, Addiction.

[53]  C. Nederkoorn,et al.  Beer à no-go: learning to stop responding to alcohol cues reduces alcohol intake via reduced affective associations rather than increased response inhibition. , 2012, Addiction.

[54]  C. Bowley,et al.  The effects of inhibitory control training on alcohol consumption, implicit alcohol-related cognitions and brain electrical activity. , 2013, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[55]  D. Livesey,et al.  The development of response inhibition in 4- and 5-year-old children , 1991 .

[56]  Daniel T. Willingham,et al.  Why Don't Students Like School?: A Cognitive Scientist Answers Questions About How the Mind Works and What It Means for the Classroom , 2009 .

[57]  Tom Brijs,et al.  Inhibitory Control and Reward Predict Risky Driving in Young Novice Drivers: A Simulator Study , 2017 .