For Immediate Release
Wednesday, August 24, 2005
CONTACT:
Robert Book or
Marianne Glass Miller
301-496-5133
Teen's
Driving Riskier with Male Teen Passenger
Teen Boys' Driving Safer with Female Teen Passenger
Teenage drivers -- both males and females -- were more likely to tailgate
and exceed the speed limit if there was a teenage male passenger in the
front seat, according to a study by the National Institute of Child Health
and Human Development of the National Institutes of Health.
Conversely, male teenagers were less likely to tailgate or exceed the speed limit when a teenage female was in the front passenger seat.
In addition, female teen drivers were slightly more likely to tailgate if there was a female teen passenger in the vehicle with them.
The study was published on-line in Accident Analysis and Prevention and will appear in a future edition of that journal.
"This study provides information that will be useful for officials in devising teen licensing standards," said NICHD Director Duane Alexander,
M.D. "The findings indicate that teen risky driving increases in the
presence of teen passengers, particularly male teen passengers. But more
important, the finding should remind teens-and the adults who care about
them-that they need to drive safely, regardless of who is in the passenger
seat."
The study was unable to determine why the presence of teen males increased the likelihood of speeding and tailgating, said the study's first author
Bruce G. Simons-Morton, Ed.D., M.P.H, Chief of NICHD's Prevention Research
Branch.
Crash rates for 16- and 17-year-old drivers are higher in the presence of
teen passengers, Dr.Simons-Morton and his colleagues wrote. However, researchers do not understand the reasons for these higher crash rates. Dr. Simons-Morton and colleagues at the survey research firm Westat undertook the current study to learn how the presence of teen passengers might affect teens' driving behavior.
To conduct the study, the researchers positioned observers at the parking
lot exits of 10 high schools in the suburban Washington, D.C. area. The
observers took notes on the make and model of the departing vehicles, as
well as the age and gender of the driver and passengers. A second group of
observers was stationed = to > of a mile away from the parking lot, and used
video recording equipment and a laser-assisted radar device to measure
traffic flow. This second set of observers charted the speed of the vehicles
and measured vehicle headway, an indication of how closely vehicles follow
the vehicles in front of them. The study authors defined vehicle headway as the time (in seconds) between vehicles as they passed a fixed point in the
roadway.
More than 3000 passing vehicles were recorded at the second site. Of these,
2251 were vehicles in
general traffic, and 471 were teen drivers (245 male and 226 female). No
passengers were present in
232 of the teen vehicles, and one or more passengers were present in 239 of
the teen vehicles.
On average, teens drove 1.3 miles an hour faster than the general traffic.
Moreover, the average
headway for teen drivers was about .17 seconds shorter than for the general
traffic (about 10 feet less at 40 miles an hour).
Both male and female teenage drivers were most likely to drive faster than
the general traffic and to allow shorter headways if there was a male
teenage passenger in the car. In fact, when a male
passenger was in the vehicle, a quarter of teenage drivers exceeded the
speed limit by at least 15 miles an hour.

Similarly, both male and female teens drove faster and allowed shorter
headways in the presence of a male teenage passenger when compared to teens
who had either no passengers or a female teen passenger. However, teenage
males allowed longer headways in the presence of female passengers.
On average, headways were .3 seconds shorter for male teens drivers with
male teen passengers, and
..15 seconds shorter for female teen drivers with female teen passengers.
"At typical driving speeds of around 40 mph, a 0.3 [seconds] difference is
equivalent to traveling slightly more than one car length closer to the
vehicle ahead," the authors wrote.
In the article, the study authors explained that although they studied
vehicle headway and speed independently, these two factors are probably
related. "Close following headways may constrain speed; fast driving may
result in close following," they wrote.
For this reason, the authors charted the proportion of teens engaging in
some form of risky driving, which they defined as either driving with a
headway of less than 1 second, and speeds 15 or more miles above the posted
speed limit.
According to these criteria, of the 14.9 percent of teen males engaging in
risky driving, 21.7 percent had a male teen passenger in the vehicle. In
contrast, only 5.5 percent of teen male drivers showed risky driving
behavior in the presence of a female passenger.
Of the 13.1 percent of teen female drivers showing risky driving behavior,
12.9 percent had a male teen passenger, and 15.5 percent had a female
passenger. Dr. Simons-Morton said that most cases of risky driving in this
15.5 percent of risky teen female drivers were due to short headways.
Dr. Simons-Morton noted that the current study could not identify why teens
were more likely to engage in more risky driving behavior in the presence of
teen passengers. Teen passengers may distract the driver or change the
driver's attitude or emotion in ways that are not yet clear. To find
answers, he and his colleagues are currently designing a study that will
involve placing electronic monitoring equipment in vehicles with teen
drivers. After learning the reasons for the risky behavior, researchers can
then work to develop ways to prevent it.
Until answers become available, Dr. Simons-Morton cautioned parents and
teens to be aware of a tendency that teens appear to have toward risky
driving when other teens are in the vehicle with them, and to be extra
vigilant against unsafe driving under these conditions.
The NICHD is part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the biomedical
research arm of the federal government. NIH is an agency of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services. The NICHD sponsors research on development, before and after birth; maternal, child, and family health;
reproductive biology and population issues; and medical rehabilitation.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) - The Nation's Medical Research
Agency - is comprised of 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the
U. S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the primary Federal
agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational
medical research, and investigates the causes, treatments, and cures for
both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its
programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.
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