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Even highly experienced drivers benefit from a brief hazard perception training intervention
Authors:Mark S Horswill  Kirsty Taylor  Sharon Newnam  Mark Wetton  Andrew Hill
Affiliation:1. School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia;2. Monash Injury Research Institute (MIRI), Monash University, Melbourne, VIC 3800, Australia
Abstract:We examined the proposal that hazard perception ability is suboptimal even in highly experienced mid-age drivers. First, we replicated previous findings in which police drivers significantly outperformed highly experienced drivers on a validated video-based hazard perception test, indicating that the ability of the experienced participants had not reached ceiling despite decades of driving. Second, we found that the highly experienced drivers’ hazard perception test performance could be improved with a mere 20 min of video-based training, and this improvement remained evident after a delay of at least a week. One possible explanation as to why hazard perception skill may be suboptimal even in experienced drivers is a dearth of self-insight, potentially resulting in a lack of motivation to improve this ability. Consistent with this proposal, we found no significant relationships between self-ratings and objective measures of hazard perception ability in this group. We also found significant self-enhancement biases in the self-ratings and that participants who received training did not rate their performance (either in real driving or in the test) as having improved, contrary to what was indicated by their objective performance data.
Keywords:Driver education  Driver training  Anticipation skill  Hazard detection  Better than average  Driver confidence  Work-related driving
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