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Robert B. Isler and Samantha A. Newland School of Psychology University of Waikato The link between Happiness and Safe Driving Behaviour.

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Presentation on theme: "Robert B. Isler and Samantha A. Newland School of Psychology University of Waikato The link between Happiness and Safe Driving Behaviour."— Presentation transcript:

1 Robert B. Isler and Samantha A. Newland School of Psychology University of Waikato The link between Happiness and Safe Driving Behaviour

2 2 People drive the way they live. Video

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4 4 Driver violations intentions predict risky driving behaviour leading to crashes. to crashes: Driver Behaviour Questionnaire: In the future how often would you expect to do each of the following? Never - 0 Certain - 4 1.Speed over the legal limit 2.Be angry about a bad driver 3.Deliberately violate a road rule 4.Cut off other drivers 5.… etc.,

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7 7 People drive the way they live.

8 Mental Languishing Moderate Flourishing Disorder Mental Health Mental Health f Are flourishing people low-risk drivers?

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10 10 Three Orientations to Happiness and Life Satisfaction

11 11 First Pathway to Happiness: Pleasure PLEASURE: Hedonic definition of well-being: More experienced pleasure is equivalent to higher well-being. e.g., -Life is too short to postpone the pleasure it can provide -I go out of my way to feel euphoric

12 12 Second Pathway to Happiness: Meaning MEANING: Finding meaning in one’s life is an important determinant of psychological well-being. e.g., - I have a responsibility to make the world a better place - What I do matters to the society 1 = Strongly disagree ……. 5 = Strongly agree

13 13 Third Pathway to Happiness: Engagement ENGAGEMENT: Well-being through engaging in activities that are engrossing and absorbing- creating flow feelings. e.g., - I am always very absorbed in what I do - Regardless what I am doing, time passes quickly. 1 = Strongly disagree ……. 5 = Strongly agree

14 14 Questionnaire 1.Demographics: Age, Gender, Licence type, Mileage 2.Driving History: Fines, Near Misses and Crashes (Incidences) 3.Driver Behaviour Questionnaire: Driver Violations Intentions (20 Questions) 4.Three Dimensions of Well-being: Pleasure, Engagement, Meaning (18 Questions)

15 15 Sample - 160 first, second and third year students -Age range: 17 - 48 years; Mean: 24 years -17-25 years (N=140); >25 years (N=20) -116 females, 44 males

16 16 Incidences and mileage, by Groups

17 17 Pleasure, Meaning and Engagement, by Groups

18 18 r = -0.6719, p < 0.01, R 2 = 0.45

19 19 r = -0.5850, p < 0.01, R 2 = 0.34

20 20 r = 0.3163, p < 0.01, R 2 = 0.1

21 21 r = -0.532, p < 0.01, R 2 = 0.28

22 22 People engage in maladaptive coping strategies in order to cope with psychological issues - by doing too much of something – or not enough e.g.,: Starving ---------- Indulging Driving too slowly ---------- Driving too fast Insomnia (Fatigue) ---------- Oversleeping Procrastination ----------Workaholic Abstinence ----------Drink-Driving Bored ----------Stress Maladaptive coping strategies

23 23 The happiness dimensions of meaning and engagement strongly relate to low-risk driving behaviour The happiness dimension of pleasure may predict risky driving - possibly relating to sensation and thrill seeking Conclusions

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