2009
DOI: 10.30552/ejep.v2i2.23
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Comportamiento de riesgo, rasgos de personalidad y accidentes de carretera en estudiantes universitarios.

Abstract: En este estudio se investigaron los rasgos de personalidad relacionados con la conducción de riesgo y los accidentes en estudiantes universitarios. El primer estudio (N=132) evaluó la relación entre los comportamientos de riesgo y la personalidad (16PF-5 dimensiones de segundo orden). Tres factores fueron extraídos en relación con la conducción de riesgo: cometer errores de conducción, distracción, errores de omisión en la conducción. Los individuos con bajo autocontrol y altos niveles de ansiedad eran más pro… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…A published study, however, suggests that men are 2-3 fold more likely than women to be responsible for motor collisions, and are not more likely to be passive victims of motor collisions. 65 This is consistent with recent nationally representative US data sets (e.g., from 2020) showing that male drivers who died as a result of traffic accidents had a greater likelihood of engaging in risky behaviors such as speeding, compared to female drivers 66 . We suspect that this type of sex difference is a valuable starting point for the exploration of both a major mechanism and a modifiable risk factor in overdose deaths, but this explanation does not exclude important roles for other biological, behavioral or social factors.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…A published study, however, suggests that men are 2-3 fold more likely than women to be responsible for motor collisions, and are not more likely to be passive victims of motor collisions. 65 This is consistent with recent nationally representative US data sets (e.g., from 2020) showing that male drivers who died as a result of traffic accidents had a greater likelihood of engaging in risky behaviors such as speeding, compared to female drivers 66 . We suspect that this type of sex difference is a valuable starting point for the exploration of both a major mechanism and a modifiable risk factor in overdose deaths, but this explanation does not exclude important roles for other biological, behavioral or social factors.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Freeman and Muraven (2010) found that relative to those who were high in self-control, individuals who were low in self-control were more likely to take excessive risks. Low self-control individuals have been found by empirical studies to be more likely to engage in various types of risky behavior, such as RSB (Griffin et al, 2012;Kahn et al, 2015), reckless driving (Ferreira et al, 2009;Ellwanger and Pratt, 2014), the use of alcohol and other drugs (Vazsonyi et al, 2006;King et al, 2011), and general risky behavior and minor delinquency (Lu et al, 2013;Chan and Chui, 2017).…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research suggests that mental health issues are some of the contributing factors to the increased uptake of risky and unhealthy lifestyle behaviours [31][32][33][34], with emerging adults being an at-risk population [35][36][37]. Self-medication and self-destructive motives are some of the explanations present in the literature for this link [38][39][40][41].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%