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Journal Article

Citation

Rasmussen C, Knapp TJ, Garner L. Percept. Mot. Skills 2000; 90(2): 437-443.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, University of Nevada, Las Vegas 89154-5030, USA. crasmusse@ccmail.nevada.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10833736

Abstract

Urban college student commuters (N = 407) were surveyed about their experiences with stress induced by driving. Of the participants 23.6% reported becoming angry at another driver more than once per day. They rated stress from other drivers as equal to the stress experienced during a college examination but gave slightly lower ratings to traffic congestion, road construction, and finding a parking place as sources of stress. Slow drivers, a child not restrained, and a vehicle following too closely were the highest rated annoying situations. Of participants, 21.6% had reported another driver to the police; nearly 22% said they carried a weapon for protection from other drivers (5.4% said a gun). Men were more than twice as likely as women to carry a weapon and three times as likely to carry a gun. Of the total sample, 19.1% feared being shot by another driver. Most participants (75.8%) said drivers were more aggressive and dangerous than they were five years ago.

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