THE PREDICTION OF AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENTS FOLLOWING THE SENIOR YEAR IN HIGH SCHOOL

ONE HUNDRED AND THREE VARIABLES WERE USED IN A UNITED STATES SAMPLE OF 799 SUBJECTS TO PREDICT NON- TRIVIAL AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENTS DURING THE YEAR FOLLOWING HIGH SCHOOL. DRIVER EDUCATION WAS FOUND TO BE UNIMPORTANT. SOME THEORETICAL CONCEPTS IN MEASUREMENT THEORY WERE USED TO ESTIMATE MAXIMUM MAGNITUDE OF RELATION. EVIDENCE OF THE VALUE OF MORE RESEARCH MONEY FOR THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE ASPECTS OF ACCIDENTS IS PRESENTED. THE NEED FOR FIELD EXPERIMENTS IS STRESSED. /AUTHOR/

  • Corporate Authors:

    Behavioral Publications

    2852 Broadway
    New York, NY  United States  10025
  • Authors:
    • Asher, W
    • DODSON, B
  • Publication Date: 1970

Language

  • English

Media Info

Subject/Index Terms

Filing Info

  • Accession Number: 00224673
  • Record Type: Publication
  • Source Agency: Transport and Road Research Laboratory (TRRL)
  • Report/Paper Numbers: HS-010 032
  • Files: HSL, TRIS
  • Created Date: Jun 19 1973 12:00AM