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The effect of age, gender and attitudes on self-regulation in driving

► We review self-regulation behaviours across the driving lifespan. ► A quadratic effect of age was determined such that younger and older drivers exhibited higher levels of self-regulation than middle-aged drivers. ► This effect was affected by experience such that when experience was controlled fo...

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Published in:Accident analysis and prevention 2012-03, Vol.45, p.19-28
Main Authors: Gwyther, Holly, Holland, Carol
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Language:English
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description ► We review self-regulation behaviours across the driving lifespan. ► A quadratic effect of age was determined such that younger and older drivers exhibited higher levels of self-regulation than middle-aged drivers. ► This effect was affected by experience such that when experience was controlled for, self-regulation increased with age. ► Anxious driving style and negative affective attitude predicted self-regulation. Results suggest that self-regulation behaviours occur as a result of driving anxiety. Self-regulation in driving has primarily been studied as a precursor to driving cessation in older people, who minimise driving risk and compensate for physical and cognitive decline by avoiding driving in challenging circumstances, e.g. poor weather conditions, in the dark and at busy times. This research explores whether other demographic groups of drivers adopt self-regulatory behaviours and examines the effects of affective and instrumental attitudes on self-regulation across the lifespan. Quantitative data were collected from 395 drivers. Women were significantly more likely than men to engage in self-regulation, and to be negatively influenced by their emotions (affective attitude). A quadratic effect of age on self-regulation was determined such that younger and older drivers reported higher scores for self-regulation than middle-years’ drivers. However, this effect was affected by experience such that when experience was controlled for, self-regulation increased with age. Nevertheless, anxious driving style and negative affective attitude were independent predictors of self-regulation behaviours. Results suggest that self-regulation behaviours are present across the driving lifespan and may occur as a result of driving anxiety or low confidence rather than as an effect of ageing.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.aap.2011.11.022
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subjects Adaptation, Psychological
Adolescent
Adult
Age
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Aging
Aging - psychology
Anxiety - psychology
Attitude
Automobile Driving - psychology
Confidence
Coping strategies
Demographics
Driving
Driving conditions
Emotions
Female
Gender Identity
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Older adults
Precursors
Risk Factors
Risk-Taking
Safety
Self Concept
Self-regulation
Social Control, Informal
Weather conditions
Young Adult
title The effect of age, gender and attitudes on self-regulation in driving
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