Reenk Roink
07-10-2011, 18:14
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/battle-sexes-men-drivers-women-dyehard-science/story?id=13841063
Researchers who studied thousands of traffic accidents over a 20-year period came up with a finding that even they found surprising: Female drivers are far more likely to run into a car driven by another woman than a man.
The study is bound to add fuel to the debate over whether men are better drivers than women, but the researchers insist that was not their intent, and the study falls short of supporting that conclusion.
Michael Sivak of the University of Michigan's Transportation Research Institute, who is lead author of the study published in the Traffic Injury Prevention journal, said in a telephone interview that he and his colleague, Brandon Schoettle, wanted to determine if there is a gender interaction component in traffic accidents. They did indeed find it, he said, but they didn't expect the difference between men and women drivers to be nearly as great as the research indicates.
He called the difference "astounding."
the gory bits
The researchers examined police reports of two-vehicle traffic accidents across the country from 1988 to 2007 and they zeroed in on the cases in which the drivers of both vehicles could "potentially" determine the gender of the other driver in the moments before the crash. The accidents occurred during "personal travel" and since men drive about 60 percent of the time compared to 40 percent by women, the researchers assumed men would be involved in more accidents than women.
The "expected" percentage of accidents in which both drivers were men should be around 36 percent, but the chances that a woman would run into another woman was expected to be less than 16 percent, because women drive less than men.
Those expectations turned out to be so far out of whack that the researchers themselves could hardly believe it.
Crashes involving two female drivers were "overrepresented" in five out of six different crash scenarios: Variations on crossing another vehicle's path, side-swiping, turning in front of another vehicle, and head on. But here's the baffling part - when both vehicles were driven by a female, the crashes exceeded the expected frequency by at least 50 percent in two scenarios, and more than 25 percent in three others.
Researchers who studied thousands of traffic accidents over a 20-year period came up with a finding that even they found surprising: Female drivers are far more likely to run into a car driven by another woman than a man.
The study is bound to add fuel to the debate over whether men are better drivers than women, but the researchers insist that was not their intent, and the study falls short of supporting that conclusion.
Michael Sivak of the University of Michigan's Transportation Research Institute, who is lead author of the study published in the Traffic Injury Prevention journal, said in a telephone interview that he and his colleague, Brandon Schoettle, wanted to determine if there is a gender interaction component in traffic accidents. They did indeed find it, he said, but they didn't expect the difference between men and women drivers to be nearly as great as the research indicates.
He called the difference "astounding."
the gory bits
The researchers examined police reports of two-vehicle traffic accidents across the country from 1988 to 2007 and they zeroed in on the cases in which the drivers of both vehicles could "potentially" determine the gender of the other driver in the moments before the crash. The accidents occurred during "personal travel" and since men drive about 60 percent of the time compared to 40 percent by women, the researchers assumed men would be involved in more accidents than women.
The "expected" percentage of accidents in which both drivers were men should be around 36 percent, but the chances that a woman would run into another woman was expected to be less than 16 percent, because women drive less than men.
Those expectations turned out to be so far out of whack that the researchers themselves could hardly believe it.
Crashes involving two female drivers were "overrepresented" in five out of six different crash scenarios: Variations on crossing another vehicle's path, side-swiping, turning in front of another vehicle, and head on. But here's the baffling part - when both vehicles were driven by a female, the crashes exceeded the expected frequency by at least 50 percent in two scenarios, and more than 25 percent in three others.