Where Drivers Dont Mean To Speed

21 November 2014 - By Eugene Herbert - The RAC Group

Hi Folks…


While researching information on the psychology associated with people who habitually do wrong things and more specifically, in an inappropriate situation, I came across the following material.


Rather than dilute the impact of it by commenting on the content I would prefer to share it in an un-edited version – and NO it doesn’t mean that we agree with the actions. It rather helps us understand why it happens, which in turn could assist in managing those situations better or differently!!!


Be sure to follow the links - there is additional material there.


Till next time – Drive Safely and when you pass a school think on how you could ensure that YOU slow down!!!


Eugene Herbert


Group Managing Director


The RAC Group


 


 Most drivers recognize the need to observe a lower speed in school zones, so why do many still break the limit?



Blaming motorists for their speeding may at times be undeserved. We have recently shown that, rather than intentional wrong-doing by drivers, cognitive factors can explain speeding behavior.


Policies and enforcement measures to tackle speeding rely on the idea that driving too fast is always intended by drivers as a result of their attitudes (lack of consideration of the possible consequences) and their willingness to act inappropriately. But speeding is not always a deliberate action.


School zone risks require lower speed limits


It is standard across Australia to find variable speed limits within school precincts. At times when children are travelling to and from school, a substantially lower limit applies, usually reducing a general urban speed limit to 25-40 km/h in the school zone.


It is important for drivers to comply with lower speed limits within school zones given the increased activity by pedestrians (especially children) in these areas. This creates increased risks and greater consequences of a collision involving pedestrians.


Despite this, speeding in school zones remains common. In response to the “significant risks associated with low-range speeding”, police and policymakers have relied on enforcement, harsher penalties and education to reduce speeding behavior. However, in school zones this often does not work.


Why might drivers speed in school zones?


We argue that drivers may recognize that they are in a school zone and slow down at the entry point when they see the speed limit signage and signals, but they forget to drive slowly as they transit the entire school precinct.


So how do drivers forget they’re in a school zone? We tend to think of memory as the recollection of past events, but memory also plays a part in planning and deciding on future behavior. This is prospective memory – the memory for future intentions – and it is very important for our everyday lives.


But prospective memory is not fool proof. Errors can occur where individuals forget to perform an intended task. Typically this happens when the “normal” flow or sequence of behavior is interrupted.


A failure to remember to complete an intended behavior can have serious, unsafe consequences. For example, in commercial aviation interruptions to pre-flight procedures and subsequent prospective memory errors have been shown to contribute to planes crashing. Mid-procedure disruptions have resulted in physicians leaving instruments or sponges in patients following surgery.


We propose that if drivers are speeding within a school zone, their behavior may be the result of a failure of prospective memory caused by some interruption. A major interruption in some school zones occurs when drivers are required to stop at traffic light intersections. Traffic light “interruptions” may lead to prospective memory error in the following ways:


The ‘green means go’ signal may cause some drivers to resume travelling at their usual speed.


Because of the relative abruptness of the traffic light change from green to amber to red, drivers may have little opportunity to encode the future intention to resume travelling at the reduced school zone speed limit. This memory error can be further promoted if additional distractions attract attention – for example, pedestrian movements or the presence of other vehicles, as well as in-car events such as a radio broadcast or conversation with a passenger. Prospective memory suffers when attention is divided.


Cues in the environment that are associated with the resumption of driving – for example, the change from red to a green traffic light, a clear path ahead to continue their journey – may lead an individual to accelerate to the speed at which they would typically drive when school zone hours do not apply. The driver has simply failed to recall the need to resume the interrupted and deferred task of driving at the lower speed limit.


On driving resumption, there are scant cues in the environment to prompt memory retrieval for the deferred task of travelling at a reduced speed. If the route is regularly travelled, the available cues probably suggest habitual driving at the usual (non-school zone) speed.


What did the study find?


We found that when a driver was able to choose the speed at which they travelled – that is, where the road was clear and there were no vehicles ahead to slow them down – then if they had been interrupted by stopping at a red traffic light, they resumed driving at higher speeds. These speeds related to the normal speed limit, rather than the temporary lower limit.


When there was no traffic light interruption, drivers progressed through the school zone at slower speeds, which were closer to the school zone limit.


When we placed a reminder cue after the traffic light – simply signage featuring twin amber flashing lights and a sign “Check Speed” – then drivers were able to correct (or fully avoid) a prospective memory error. The driving speeds on resumption were fully compliant with the school speed limit.


What this research means


We are not arguing that it is invalid to treat speeding behavior as an intentional act. A number of researchers have found that drivers do deliberately and consciously intend to speed.


What we are arguing is that, in some circumstances, the way the road infrastructure is designed may encourage and prompt motorists to engage in otherwise avoidable illegal speeding behavior. We have shown that such a phenomenon can occur when traffic lights interrupt drivers in school zones.


Drivers appear not to notice their behavior. But if reminded to think about their speed, they adopt a correct, safe speed.

The same cognitive process may also apply in circumstances where drivers fail to slow at speed cameras sites, at road works sites or in the transition from rural to urban speed zones.   



http://advanceddriving.co.za

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