首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


From Gibson and Crooks to Damasio: The role of psychology in the development of driver behaviour models
Institution:1. Department of Physics Education, Chonnam National University, Gwangju 500-757, Republic of Korea;2. Theoretical Physics Division, Chern Institute of Mathematics, Nankai University, Tianjin 300071, People’s Republic of China;3. Centre for Quantum Technologies, National University of Singapore, 3 Science Drive 2, Singapore 117543, Singapore;1. Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, R3T 2N2, Canada;2. Jefferson Lab, 12000 Jefferson Avenue, Newport News, VA 23606, USA;3. ARC Centre of Excellence for Particle Physics at the Terascale and CSSM, Department of Physics, University of Adelaide, Adelaide SA 5005, Australia;1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 2025 E Newport Ave, NWQ 4515, Milwaukee, WI 53201, United States;2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 2025 E Newport Ave, NWQ 4415, Milwaukee, WI 53201, United States;1. Faculty of Social Sciences, Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania;4. Centre for Accident Research and Road Safety – Queensland (CARRS-Q), Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation (IHBI), Queensland University of Technology (QUT), University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia;5. Adolescent Risk Research Unit (ARRU), Sunshine Coast Mind and Neuroscience – Thompson Institute, Australia;6. School of Social Sciences, University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia;1. University of Belgrade, Faculty of Transport and Traffic Engineering, Vojvode Stepe 305, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia;2. Aalto University, Department of Built Environment, Otakaari 4, 02150 Espoo, Finland
Abstract:This article presents a brief history and perspective of behavioural model development in traffic psychology. As one specific example of a key behavioural model, Gibson and Crooks (1938), in their classic field theoretical study, offered the first scientific attempt to deal with the issue of compensation. Two central theoretical concepts were developed: “Field of safe travel” and “Minimum stopping zone”. The interplay between the two was used to describe and explain risk compensation and illustrated by observing the impact of brakes on driver behaviour: Better brakes could make the field of safe travel – i.e. the distance to the car in front – shorter. Nearly 50 years later, the launch of Wilde’s Risk Homeostasis Theory (RHT) gave rise to a profound debate about risk homeostasis and risk compensation. The core issue in the debate was Wilde’s strict assertion that all individuals, not only car-drivers, carry an inherent target level of risk that they are seeking to maintain or restore. Gibson and Crooks fell well within psychological theories of the time, while Wilde’s RHT emerged more from control theory and economic utility theory than from psychology. In the 1990s neuroscience emerges, especially by Damasio who introduces a paradigm that has proven fruitful as a framework of more recent driver behaviour models. But neuroscience also had its forerunner in Taylor’s proposal that driver behaviour is governed by a constancy in Galvanic Skin Response (GSR) which makes driving a self-paced task aiming at keeping the GSR at a constant level. Näätänen and Summala’s integrated Taylor in their “Zero-risk model” which has persisted and still prevails as a solid and well accepted model. Psychological learning theory has, however, rarely been adequately dealt with which is quite odd given the prevalence of speeding and risk compensation which cannot escape explanations based on operant conditioning. The paper discusses the emerging role of psychology and psychological concepts that has been proposed and evolved through the development of driver behaviour models since Gibson and Crooks’ study of 1938. The views presented are subjective, they do not represent any attempt to describe the objective reality of the time.
Keywords:Driver behaviour  Models  Psychology  History  Risk compensation
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号