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Journal Article

Citation

No Author(s) Listed. IIHS Status Rep. 2007; 42(1): 5-.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, Insurance Institute for Highway Safety)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This article describes a new study that examines the reasons why new drivers are highly accident prone even compared with other accident prone groups. Of accidents these beginning drivers are involved in, they are at fault 68 percent of the time with 95 percents of crashes being single-vehicle crashes. 39 percent of beginner crashes are from running off the road and 31 percent of the crashes involved the beginning driver rear-ending another driver. Most of these accidents, the article explains, are from lack of attentiveness on the part of the drivers, with distractions including various media as compact disc players, radios, and cellular telephones as well as friends in the vehicle. The article also explains types of accident proneness based on gender, with males being more statistically likely to be involved in crashes due to loss of control and females being more likely to rear-end.


Keywords: Driver distraction

Language: en

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