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What Makes a Good Passenger? From Teen Drivers’ Perspectives
Author(s) -
YiChing Lee,
Noelle LaVoie
Publication year - 2013
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.17077/drivingassessment.1482
Subject(s) - perception , psychology , exploratory research , crash , applied psychology , politeness , focus group , psychosocial , computer science , business , marketing , sociology , political science , neuroscience , psychiatry , anthropology , law , programming language
An exploratory study was designed to examine male and female teenage drivers’ perceptions and expectations of peer passengers. Qualitative methods were used to interview and survey 16- and 17-year-old licensed drivers. 10 interviewees and 96 survey respondents were included in the analysis. Consistent with previous studies, teenage drivers were concerned about passenger-related distractions. There were noticeable differences between males and females in their perceptions of peer behaviors: females most expected passengers to be non-distracting and polite and males most expected passengers to behave maturely. Future studies should focus on social factors and the psychosocial function of driving for better understanding of the peer passenger interactions, and ultimately the development of passenger-related crash prevention efforts.

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