Sep 22 – 25, 2024
Noto (SR)
Europe/Rome timezone

Susceptibility to distracted driving: the role of personality and individual factors

Sep 24, 2024, 5:30 PM
10m
Aula Genovesi

Aula Genovesi

Mini-talks Mini-talks

Speaker

Luigi Tinella (Università degli studi di Salerno)

Description

The study aimed to investigate associations between the Big Five personality dimensions with the susceptibility of distracted driving (i.e., engagement in voluntary distraction, attitudes toward distraction, and susceptibility to involuntary distraction) comparing samples of Australian and Italian drivers. Distracted driving remains a significant global challenge to road safety, contributing to the occurrence of motor-vehicle crashes with serious consequences on public and environmental health. Despite efforts to explore factors underlying distracted driving, less is known on the role of the driver’s personality in affecting the tendency to report distraction. Five hundred and fifty-one participants (55% females) from Australia and Italy completed an online survey including questionnaires on personality and distracted driving. The invariance of the tested model was assessed through a multigroup path analysis considering personality traits as predictors and different facets of the susceptibility to distracted driving as outcomes, in a unique model. The effects of age, gender, and education were also controlled in the analyses. Results showed differences among nationality groups in personality traits as well as in susceptibility to distraction. Findings also suggested positive effects of Neuroticism, Extraversion, and Agreeableness on all dimensions of susceptibility to distracted driving. Conscientiousness was found to affect attitudes toward distraction, perceived control, and perceived social norms. Finally, the tendency to report susceptibility to involuntary distraction was influenced by Openness only. These results provide insights on the usefulness of the assessment of a personality profile to achieve road safety improvements and represent a valuable source of knowledge for the study of individual risk-exposure.

Primary author

Luigi Tinella (Università degli studi di Salerno)

Co-authors

Alessandro Oronzo Caffò (Dipartimento di Scienze della Formazione, Psicologia, Comunicazione, Università degli Studi di Bari "Aldo Moro") Andrea Bosco (Dipartimento di Scienze della Formazione, Psicologia, Comunicazione, Università degli Studi di Bari 'Aldo Moro') Antonella Lopez (Faculty of Law, Giustino Fortunato University, Benevento, Italy) Sergio Traficante (Università degli Studi di Bari Aldo Moro)

Presentation materials

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