Introduction: The current study builds on previous versions of the Driver Behaviour Questionnaire (DBQ) by incorporating a larger sample of driving behaviors targeting inattention, distraction, aggressive driving, and health related to aging. The goals of this study were to determine if the resulting factor structure was consistent with a more contemporary view of unsafe driving behaviors, and to determine whether scores on the factors could predict self-reported collisions and police citations.
Methods: The instrument was given to a sample of 3295 drivers ranging in age from 19 to 80+ years old.
Objectives: To evaluate the ability to predict on-road driving in cognitively impaired older drivers.
Design: Cross-sectional observational study.
Setting: Laboratory tests and on-road assessment.
Introduction: This study evaluated the ability to predict the on-road driving of older drivers using a battery of laboratory-based instruments.
Methods: The Roadwise Review, a brief Hazard Perception Test and several tests of vision were given to 65 cognitively healthy, licensed older drivers (M = 74 years, SD = 9 years). They also participated in a standardized driving assessment of approximately 18 km, along a mixed residential and commercial route.
Introduction: The Driver Behaviour Questionnaire (DBQ), originally developed in Britain by Reason et al. [Reason, J., Manstead, A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF