Committing driving violations: an observational study comparing city, town and village.

INTRODUCTION This article compares observed driving behavior in a city, a town, and a village. METHOD Unobtrusive observations were made at intersections in each residential type. Five violation types were observed: (a) not wearing a seat belt (seat belt violation); (b) not using a safety seat for a child (safety seat violation for children); (c) not using a speaker while speaking on the phone (on-phone violation); (d) failing to comply with a 'give way' sign ('give way' sign violation); and (e) stopping in an undesignated area (undesignated stop violation). It was expected that in accordance with the anonymity hypothesis that the bigger residential areas' rate of traffic violations would be higher. The effects of the residential type, drivers' gender, and age were assessed using the multiple regression model. The stepwise method of evaluation was employed. The model converged on step 3 (Adjusted R square=0.039). Residential type and gender contributed significantly to the model. RESULTS Consistent with prior research, male drivers committed more violations than female drivers. Chi-square analyses were used to test the distribution of violations by the settlement types. Overall, more drivers committed violations in the two small residential areas than in the city, with 30% of city drivers, 43% of town drivers, and 51% of village drivers committing at least one violation (chi2 (2)=37.65, p<0.001). Moreover, in the town and the village, a combination of one or more violations was committed more often than in the city(chi2 (1)=34.645, p<0.001). Accordingly, more drivers committed violations in the two small settlements (48.4%) than in the city (30.6%). Possible explanations for the observed results were provided in the Discussion section. IMPACT ON INDUSTRY The conclusions of this paper are that drivers in small villages tend to disobey traffic laws. Therefore, efforts have to be made in companies to take this issue in consideration while running fleets in companies located in small places far from the center.

[1]  B. Hills Vision, Visibility, and Perception in Driving , 1980, Perception.

[2]  M A Abdel-Aty,et al.  Exploring the relationship between alcohol and the driver characteristics in motor vehicle accidents. , 2000, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[3]  P. Ulleberg,et al.  Risk-taking attitudes among young drivers: the psychometric qualities and dimensionality of an instrument to measure young drivers' risk-taking attitudes. , 2002, Scandinavian journal of psychology.

[4]  M. Zuckerman Behavioral Expressions and Biosocial Bases of Sensation Seeking , 1994 .

[5]  Tanja S. Stucke Der Zusammenhang zwischen Selbstkonzept und selbstberichtetem aggressiven Fahrverhalten , 2001 .

[6]  Tova Rosenbloom,et al.  Sensation seeking and detection of risky road signals: a developmental perspective. , 2002, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[7]  H Lum,et al.  Modeling vehicle accidents and highway geometric design relationships. , 1993, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[8]  A. L. Beaman,et al.  Effects of deindividuation variables on stealing among Halloween trick-or-treaters. , 1976 .

[9]  Edward K. Sadalla,et al.  Population Size, Structural Differentiation, and Human Behavior , 1978 .

[10]  Tova Rosenbloom Sensation seeking and pedestrian crossing compliance , 2006 .

[11]  Tova Rosenbloom,et al.  Signal detection in conditions of everyday life traffic dilemmas. , 2002, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[12]  Leonard Evans,et al.  Human behavior and traffic safety , 2011 .

[13]  B. E. Porter,et al.  The likelihood of becoming a pedestrian fatality and drivers’ knowledge of pedestrian rights and responsibilities in the Commonwealth of Virginia , 2004 .

[14]  Tova Rosenbloom,et al.  Sensation seeking and risk taking in mortality salience , 2003 .

[15]  Tova Rosenbloom,et al.  Risk evaluation and risky behavior of high and low sensation seekers , 2003 .

[16]  Roy F. Baumeister,et al.  Self-Evaluation, Persistence, and Performance Following Implicit Rejection: The Role of Trait Self-Esteem , 2002 .

[17]  Niki Harré,et al.  THE DEVELOPMENT OF RISKY DRIVING IN ADOLESCENCE , 2000 .

[18]  D. Yagil Gender and age-related differences in attitudes toward traffic laws and traffic violations , 1998 .

[19]  P S McCarthy,et al.  Seat belt usage rates: a test of Peltzman's hypothesis. , 1986, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[20]  I D Brown,et al.  Assessing one's own and others' driving ability: influences of sex, age, and experience. , 1989, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[21]  Dorothy Jean Begg,et al.  Changes in risky driving behavior from age 21 to 26 years , 2001 .

[22]  Tova Rosenbloom,et al.  Driving performance while using cell phones: an observational study. , 2006, Journal of safety research.

[23]  Leonard Evans,et al.  Traffic Safety and the Driver , 1991 .

[24]  G E Schreer,et al.  NARCISSISM AND AGGRESSION: IS INFLATED SELF-ESTEEM RELATED TO AGGRESSIVE DRIVING? , 2002 .

[25]  P. Zimbardo The human choice: Individuation, reason, and order versus deindividuation, impulse, and chaos. , 1969 .

[26]  W. Lilli,et al.  Wearing uniforms and aggression–A field experiment , 1987 .

[27]  Tova Rosenbloom,et al.  For heaven’s sake follow the rules: pedestrians’ behavior in an ultra-orthodox and a non-orthodox city , 2004 .

[28]  A F Williams,et al.  Differences in young driver crash involvement in states with varying licensure practices. , 1996, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[29]  Heikki Summala,et al.  Does traffic congestion increase driver aggression , 1999 .

[30]  Herbert L. Petri,et al.  Anonymity and aggressive driving behavior: A field study , 1995 .

[31]  Paul B. Paulus,et al.  Psychology of Group Influence , 1981 .

[32]  David L Wiesenthal,et al.  The Relationship Between Driver Aggression, Violence, and Vengeance , 2002, Violence and Victims.

[33]  P. Ulleberg PERSONALITY SUBTYPES OF YOUNG DRIVERS. RELATIONSHIP TO RISK-TAKING PREFERENCES, ACCIDENT INVOLVEMENT, AND RESPONSE TO A TRAFFIC SAFETY CAMPAIGN , 2001 .

[34]  Karel Brookhuis,et al.  The interaction between driving and in-vehicle information systems: comparison of results from laboratory, simulator and real-world studies , 2005 .

[35]  Amit Shahar,et al.  Women drivers' behavior in well-known versus less familiar locations. , 2007, Journal of safety research.

[36]  D. E Haigney,et al.  Concurrent mobile (cellular) phone use and driving performance: task demand characteristics and compensatory processes , 2000 .

[37]  A. Mcknight,et al.  The Effects of Enforcement and Public Information on Compliance , 1985 .

[38]  A F Williams,et al.  Relationship of parent driving records to the driving records of their children. , 2001, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[39]  Robert B. Isler,et al.  DRIVER BEHAVIOUR AT RURAL T-INTERSECTIONS , 1996 .

[40]  Hong-Dar Isaac Wu,et al.  The effect of crash experience on changes in risk taking among urban and rural young people. , 2004, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[41]  D L Wiesenthal,et al.  Further validation of the driving vengeance questionnaire. , 2001, Violence and victims.