4.5 Article

Predicting young drivers? safe behaviour of stopping in the dilemma zone

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.trf.2022.11.017

Keywords

Theory of planned behaviour; Prototype willingness model; Intersection; Novice drivers; Teen drivers; Safe driving; Risky driving

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Young drivers are more likely to be involved in road crashes, especially at intersections in urban areas. The dilemma zone, when a driver approaches a signalised intersection and is unsure whether to continue or stop, is a key focus for crashes at intersections. However, there has been a lack of research on young drivers' safe driving behaviors and the psychosocial factors that influence their decisions at intersections. This study aimed to explain young drivers' intentions and predict their self-reported behavior of stopping in the dilemma zone using psychosocial factors.
Young drivers are overrepresented in road crashes, half of which occur at intersections in urban areas. One area of focus for crashes at intersections is the dilemma zone, when a driver approaches a signalised intersection at the onset of the yellow light and is unsure whether to continue through or to stop. A challenge in this area of research has been the lack of focus on safe, rather than risky, driving behaviours of young drivers at intersections and a paucity of research on psychosocial factors that motivate driving decisions at intersections. This study aimed to explain young drivers' intentions and predict their self-reported behaviour of stopping in the dilemma zone (the safe behaviour), using psychosocial factors which influence behaviour in young drivers. Participants were N = 180 young drivers from Queensland. An initial online survey presented three unique scenarios to participants: a general dilemma zone situation, the dilemma zone whilst running late and the dilemma zone where the vehicle in front drives through the yellow light. Participants responded to items measuring Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) constructs extended with prototype perceptions and willingness constructs from the Prototype Willingness Model (PWM). A follow-up online survey measured participants' self-reported driving behaviours in the previous three weeks, in each scenario. Hierarchical multiple regressions found that the TPB and PWM constructs significantly explained between 59.1 % and 72.7 % of the variance in intentions to stop. This suggested the utility of extending the TPB with a socialreaction decision making model such as the PWM. The follow-up survey (N = 74), found that intentions, but not PBC or willingness, significantly predicted 29 % of the variance in young drivers' self-reported stopping behaviour for the general scenario and the running late scenario and 10.8 % for the vehicle in front scenario. The findings of this study suggest the value of researching young drivers' safe behaviours and provide information on psychosocial factors, such as prototype perceptions, that road safety interventions can target in order to reduce road crashes. Additionally, these findings provide evidence for the use of the PWM to extend the TPB, and in investigating young drivers' decisions in the dilemma zone.

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