UNDERSTANDING ROAD RAGE: SUMMARY OF FIRST-YEAR PROJECT ACTIVITIES

Popular opinion has it that "road rage" is increasingly prevalent and dangerous in the urban driving environment. Whether or not this opinion is true, driver frustration in congested conditions may lead to an increase in aggressive driving, a less intentionally malignant and more common subset of road rage. The potential for significant safety benefits might be realized if transportation professionals had a better understanding of some roadway factors and characteristics of the congested driving environment that induce irritation and perhaps contribute to the frequency of aggressive driving. This report documents the major first-year activities: literature review, focus groups, telephone survey, and development of potential traffic engineering mitigation measures. Researchers studied five focus groups consisting of six to ten individuals and a telephone survey of over 400 Dallas motorists to identify and quantify the pertinent factors increasing driver impatience, irritation, and stress in the congested driving environment. Based upon the survey responses, the research team developed reasonable and feasible traffic engineering mitigation measures (i.e., those factors related to the roadway itself--geometrics, signs and markings, incident clearance activities, etc.) for further evaluation. The following three items were selected for further evaluation: (1) Innovative merge strategies--test concepts such as the late merge and zipping at urban work zones; (2) Bottleneck improvements--evaluate the benefits of adding capacity at freeway bottlenecks for reducing aggressive driving; and (3) Photogrammetric investigation of incidents--assess the ability of photogrammetry to expedite incident clearance. The second year of the project will test these measures, both in a laboratory setting (driving simulator in College Station) and in the real world (field studies on highway facilities in the Dallas area).

[1]  D. Parker,et al.  Extending the theory of planned behaviour: The role of personal norm , 1995 .

[2]  G. Matthews,et al.  DIMENSIONS OF DRIVER STRESS , 1989 .

[3]  G. Bliersbach,et al.  Interaction conflicts and interaction patterns in traffic situations , 1980 .

[4]  LITERATURE REVIEW ON DRIVER STRESS , 1987 .

[5]  Lisa Dorn,et al.  Driver Stress and Performance on a Driving Simulator , 1998, Hum. Factors.

[6]  James S. Baxter,et al.  Intention to commit driving violations: An application of the theory of planned behavior. , 1992 .

[7]  Kurt Landau,et al.  Method for Evaluation of Driver Stress Resulting from Road Characteristics , 2000 .

[8]  Gerald Matthews,et al.  Individual Differences in Driver Stress and Performance , 1996 .

[9]  Gerald Matthews,et al.  Age and Gender Differences in Stress Responses during Simulated Driving , 1999 .

[10]  D. French,et al.  Behavioral correlates of individual differences in road-traffic crash risk: an examination method and findings. , 1993, Psychological bulletin.

[11]  Jack Lucero Fleck,et al.  Can We Make Red-Light Runners Stop?: Red-Light Photo Enforcement in San Francisco, California , 1999 .

[12]  T. Triggs,et al.  Driver aggression: the role of personality, social characteristics, risk and motivation , 1989 .

[13]  Diane Gurney Campaign safe and sober: Flaherty L, MacLean S, editors. Park Ridge (IL): ENA, 233 pp., ISBN 0-935890-05-X , 1997 .

[14]  David Shinar,et al.  Aggressive driving: the contribution of the drivers and the situation , 1998 .

[15]  Ouis,et al.  THE VIEW FROM THE ROAD : IMPLICATIONS FOR STRESS RECOVERY AND IMMUNIZATION , 1998 .

[16]  G. Matthews,et al.  A COMPREHENSIVE QUESTIONNAIRE MEASURE OF DRIVER STRESS AND AFFECT , 1997 .

[17]  M Joint,et al.  RAGE AND VIOLENCE OF DRIVER AGGRESSION , 1998 .

[18]  Janet B Goehring,et al.  Aggressive Driving: Background and Overview Report , 2000 .

[19]  Patrick T McCoy,et al.  Traffic Flow Characteristics of the Late Merge Work Zone Control Strategy , 1999 .

[20]  S Stradling,et al.  Behavioural characteristics and involvement in different types of traffic accident. , 1995, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[21]  Lisa Dorn,et al.  DRIVER STRESS AND SIMULATED DRIVING: STUDIES OF RISK TAKING AND ATTENTION , 1993 .

[22]  Richard A. Retting URBAN MOTOR VEHICLE CRASHES AND POTENTIAL COUNTERMEASURES , 1996 .

[23]  John Cohen Frustration and Aggression , 1944, Nature.

[24]  J Robertson,et al.  METHODS FOR MONITORING DRIVER STRESS , 1992 .

[25]  S G Stradling,et al.  Determinants of intention to commit driving violations. , 1992, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[26]  Richard Trumbull,et al.  Psychological stress : issues in research , 1967 .

[27]  T. Rothengatter,et al.  Traffic and Transport Psychology: Theory and Application , 1997 .

[28]  B. Elliott Road rage: Media hype or serious road safety issue? , 1999 .

[29]  E. Sadalla INVESTIGATE THE EFFECTS OF DRIVING STRESS ON HEALTH. FINAL REPORT , 1995 .

[30]  B A Jonah,et al.  Sensation seeking and risky driving: a review and synthesis of the literature. , 1997, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[31]  T. Cox,et al.  The nature and measurement of stress. , 1985, Ergonomics.

[32]  S A Robertson OVERSEAS USE OF DRIVER STRESS IN THE PROCESS OF ROAD DESIGN , 1987 .

[33]  D. Stokols,et al.  Traffic congestion, type A behavior, and stress. , 1978, The Journal of applied psychology.

[34]  Lisa Dorn,et al.  Reliability of the Driving Behaviour Inventory , 1993 .

[35]  D. Parker INTENTIONS TO VIOLATE , 1991 .

[36]  Daniel Stokols,et al.  Objective and subjective dimensions of travel impedance as determinants of commuting stress , 1990, American journal of community psychology.

[37]  Steven E Shladover,et al.  Why We Should Develop a Truly Automated Highway System , 1998 .

[38]  R West,et al.  Direct observation of driving, self reports of driver behaviour, and accident involvement. , 1993, Ergonomics.

[39]  A Gulian,et al.  EXPLORATION OF DRIVER STRESS USING SELF-REPORTED DATA --ROAD USER BEHAVIOR. THEORY AND RESEARCH. PAPERS PRESENTED AT THE 2ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ROAD SAFETY HELD IN GRONINGEN, NETHERLANDS, AUGUST 1987 , 1988 .