NTL Record

Title Motivations for Speeding, Volume III: Appendices
Record ID 51654
Personal Name
Creator
Richard, Christian M.; Campbell, John L.; Lichty, Monica G.; Brown, James L.; Chrysler, Susan; Lee, John D.; Boyle, Linda; Reagle, George
Corporate Creator Battelle Memorial Institute
Corporate
Contributor
United States. Department of Transportation. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Office of Behavioral Safety Research
Publisher United States. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Office of Behavioral Safety Research
Publication Date 20130900
Language English
Abstract This is Volume III of a three-volume report. The report contains the results of a study that examined the speeding behavior of drivers in their own vehicles over the course of three to four weeks of naturalistic driving in urban (Seattle, WA) and rural (College Station, TX) settings. The purpose of this research was to (1) identify the reasons why drivers speed, (2) model the relative roles of situational, demographic, and personality factors in predicting travel speeds, (3) classify speeders, and (4) identify interventions/countermeasures and strategies for reducing speeding behaviors. Data collected from 164 drivers included 1-Hz recordings of vehicle position and speed using GPS receivers, responses to a battery of a personal inventory questionnaires, and daily driving logs that captured trip-specific situational factors. Vehicle speed and position data were combined with road network data containing validated posted speed information to identify speeding episodes. The descriptive analysis of speeding data provided evidence for different types of speeding behaviors among individual drivers including: (1) infrequent or incidental speeding, which may be unintentional (2) trip-specific situational speeding, (3) taking many trips with a small amount of speeding per trip (i.e., casual speeding), and (4) habitual or chronic speeding. Regression models were developed to identify predictors of “any” speeding (logistic regression) and amount of speeding (linear regressions). Significant predictors included demographic variables such as age and gender, situational factors such as time-of-day and day-of-week, and key personal inventory factors such as attitudes towards reckless driving. In addition, focus group discussions were conducted with a subset of study participants who were classified as “speeders” and “non-speeders” to identify key attitudes and beliefs towards speeding and the effectiveness of potential countermeasures.
Rosap ID dot:1963
Rosap URL https://rosap.ntl.bts.gov/view/dot/1963
ResearchHub ID 670
TRT Terms Speeding; Motivation; Global Positioning System; Data collection; Countermeasures; Linear regression analysis; Traffic safety; Free flow speeds; Travel behavior; High risk drivers
General Subjects speed selection; free-flow countermeasures; unsafe driving driving; Research Hub
Geographical
Coverage
Seattle (Washington); Texas
Contract Number DTNH22-06-D-00040, Task#2
Report Number DOT HS 811 819
Availability NHTSA - Behavioral Safety Research
Resource type Tech Report
URL https://ntlrepository.blob.core.windows.net/lib/51000/51600/51654/811819_Workroom_ID_51654.pdf
Format PDF
Database NTL Digital Repository