Personality, socioeconomic status, attitude, intention and risky driving behavior

Risky driving behavior (RDB) is one of the human factors contributing to the majority traffic injuries and crashes. This paper examines the influence of personality factors on RDB and the mediating role of intention and attitude in the relationship. The influence of different SES, personality, marit...

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Main Authors: Charles Atombo, Chaozhong Wu, Emmanuel O. Tettehfio, Aaron A. Agbo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-12-01
Series:Cogent Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2017.1376424
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author Charles Atombo
Chaozhong Wu
Emmanuel O. Tettehfio
Aaron A. Agbo
author_facet Charles Atombo
Chaozhong Wu
Emmanuel O. Tettehfio
Aaron A. Agbo
author_sort Charles Atombo
collection DOAJ
description Risky driving behavior (RDB) is one of the human factors contributing to the majority traffic injuries and crashes. This paper examines the influence of personality factors on RDB and the mediating role of intention and attitude in the relationship. The influence of different SES, personality, marital status, and gender characteristics on attitude, intention, and risky driving was also examined. A sample of 354 fully licensed Ghanaian drivers, including 278 males and 76 females, participated in the study at two times points separated by three months. The correlation results showed that unhealthy family relationship and negative emotions were positively associated with illegal speed-related behaviors, risky driving, and accident involvement. The results of a structural equation model suggested that personality variables significantly and positively influence intention and attitude toward speeding, with normlessness directly and positively influencing RBD. The mediation analysis shows that intention mediated the effects of personality variables on RBD. No significant mediating effect for attitude was found. The analysis of variance result shows that drivers with high socioeconomic status and personality had the high intention and attitude toward speeding and reported more RDB. Finally, drivers who had been divorced significantly reported more positive attitude toward speeding than the married and single group. Based on the results, the study concludes that, in accessing the effect of personality measures on RDB, it is important to include intention as a possible mediator for more accurate decision. Practical implications for managing different personalities and socioeconomic positions are also discussed.
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spelling doaj.art-7d80b505e53b4be098d5c0c9b0141db62022-12-21T18:02:13ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Psychology2331-19082017-12-014110.1080/23311908.2017.13764241376424Personality, socioeconomic status, attitude, intention and risky driving behaviorCharles Atombo0Chaozhong Wu1Emmanuel O. Tettehfio2Aaron A. Agbo3Ho Technical UniversityWuhan University of TechnologyHo Technical UniversityWuhan University of TechnologyRisky driving behavior (RDB) is one of the human factors contributing to the majority traffic injuries and crashes. This paper examines the influence of personality factors on RDB and the mediating role of intention and attitude in the relationship. The influence of different SES, personality, marital status, and gender characteristics on attitude, intention, and risky driving was also examined. A sample of 354 fully licensed Ghanaian drivers, including 278 males and 76 females, participated in the study at two times points separated by three months. The correlation results showed that unhealthy family relationship and negative emotions were positively associated with illegal speed-related behaviors, risky driving, and accident involvement. The results of a structural equation model suggested that personality variables significantly and positively influence intention and attitude toward speeding, with normlessness directly and positively influencing RBD. The mediation analysis shows that intention mediated the effects of personality variables on RBD. No significant mediating effect for attitude was found. The analysis of variance result shows that drivers with high socioeconomic status and personality had the high intention and attitude toward speeding and reported more RDB. Finally, drivers who had been divorced significantly reported more positive attitude toward speeding than the married and single group. Based on the results, the study concludes that, in accessing the effect of personality measures on RDB, it is important to include intention as a possible mediator for more accurate decision. Practical implications for managing different personalities and socioeconomic positions are also discussed.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2017.1376424socioeconomic statussensation-seekingnormlessnessrisky driving behavior, intentionattitude
spellingShingle Charles Atombo
Chaozhong Wu
Emmanuel O. Tettehfio
Aaron A. Agbo
Personality, socioeconomic status, attitude, intention and risky driving behavior
Cogent Psychology
socioeconomic status
sensation-seeking
normlessness
risky driving behavior, intention
attitude
title Personality, socioeconomic status, attitude, intention and risky driving behavior
title_full Personality, socioeconomic status, attitude, intention and risky driving behavior
title_fullStr Personality, socioeconomic status, attitude, intention and risky driving behavior
title_full_unstemmed Personality, socioeconomic status, attitude, intention and risky driving behavior
title_short Personality, socioeconomic status, attitude, intention and risky driving behavior
title_sort personality socioeconomic status attitude intention and risky driving behavior
topic socioeconomic status
sensation-seeking
normlessness
risky driving behavior, intention
attitude
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2017.1376424
work_keys_str_mv AT charlesatombo personalitysocioeconomicstatusattitudeintentionandriskydrivingbehavior
AT chaozhongwu personalitysocioeconomicstatusattitudeintentionandriskydrivingbehavior
AT emmanuelotettehfio personalitysocioeconomicstatusattitudeintentionandriskydrivingbehavior
AT aaronaagbo personalitysocioeconomicstatusattitudeintentionandriskydrivingbehavior