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Article Dans Une Revue Transportation Research Record Année : 2021

The Effect of Culture on Gender Differences in Driver Risk Behavior through Comparative Analysis of 32 Countries

Résumé

The purpose of the paper is to study the effect of culture on gender differences in accidental risk behaviours. The ESRA2018 database, comprising 25,459 drivers (53% male) surveyed by an online questionnaire in 32 countries, was used to observe gender and regional differences (Africa5, AsiaOceania5, Europa20, NorthAmerica2) in reported behaviour, personal and social acceptability of 4 violations: drinking and driving, speeding, not wearing a seatbelt and phone while driving. The results show that gender differences are small but significant and vary across cultures with men valuing accidental risk behaviours more than women do in all regions observed. In addition, speeding appears to be the most widespread and globally accepted of the four violations tested for both men and women. Results are discussed in terms of origin of gender differences and of factors explaining lack of compliance with speed limitation. Theses results could be useful to better tailor road safety campaigns and education.

Domaines

Psychologie
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Dates et versions

hal-03014088 , version 1 (19-11-2020)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-03014088 , version 1

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Marie-Axelle Granié, Chloé Thevenet, Florent Varet, Myriam Evennou, Noureddine Oulid-Azouz, et al.. The Effect of Culture on Gender Differences in Driver Risk Behavior through Comparative Analysis of 32 Countries. Transportation Research Record, 2021. ⟨hal-03014088⟩
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