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Published by
 Australian Academy of Science
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KEY TEXT
Bitumen battles the phenomenon of road rage
This topic is sponsored by the
NRMA ACT Road Safety Trust.
Scientists are starting to study road rage for clues about the physiological and social causes of
anti-social behaviour.
A motorcyclist
brought out the worst in a Sydney driver recently when he remonstrated against
some aggressive driving. Enraged, the driver rammed the motorcycle with his car
and, later, attempted to run over the motorcyclist and two bystanders who had
come to his aid. One of the bystanders was trapped under the bike and dragged
for 15 metres, suffering head injuries and a shattered knee.
This is the sort
of behaviour that the media has dubbed ‘road rage’. Perhaps what excites the
media about road rage is that serious assault, including murder, can be
provoked by apparently trivial driving mistakes. Horrific stories of road rage
are not in short supply. But is road rage more prevalent now than in the past?
And can it be prevented?
Distinguishing between road rage and aggressive driving
If road rage is
to be studied, understood and addressed it is important that it is clearly
defined. Numerous aggressive driving acts, ranging from the mild to the
malicious, have sometimes been steered into the road rage category. These
include unfriendly gestures (eg, a raised fist), cutting off another car, following
too closely or pursuing a vehicle.
However, many
people working in the area feel that the term road rage should be limited to
criminal acts of assault. Such a definition was used in a study published in
1997 by the American Automobile Association Foundation for Traffic Safety, in
which road rage was taken to be: an
incident in which an angry or impatient motorist or passenger injures or kills
another motorist, passenger, or pedestrian, or attempts or threatens to injure
or kill another motorist, passenger, or pedestrian.
Is road rage increasing?
Sensational
though the worst examples of road rage are, there remains a question mark over
whether they are on the increase. In Australia, researchers at the University
of Western Australia surveyed offence reports compiled by police for the years
1991 to 2000 for incidents of road rage, which the study defined as
‘driving-related impulsive violence between strangers’. Violence, in these
cases, included actual physical assaults and plausible threats of violence. The
researchers reported that 797 road rage incidents had occurred in Western
Australia between 1991 and 1995. This increased to 1404 incidents between 1996 and 2000. This increase was not simply a
function of increasing population or road use the rate of road rage incidents
per head of population and per 100,000 registered vehicles also increased. However, the rate of road rage remained
generally constant (at about 10 per cent) as a percentage of all street
assaults by strangers during the period.
Increased reporting of violence
The road rage
phenomenon has captured the public imagination, and there has been a dramatic
increase in the reporting of road rage incidents in the media. Some people say
that road rage is simply a manifestation of generally increasing levels of
violence in society. But perceptions
about the levels of violence can sometimes be misleading. According to a report
published by the Australian Institute of Criminology in 1996, many forms of violence,
including those occurring within the family, probably went unreported in
earlier times. Since such violence is seen increasingly as a crime, it is
possible that the frequency of reporting is increasing, creating the perception
of an increasing level of violence.
Moreover, roads have certainly become safer in recent decades. According
to the Australian Bureau of Transport Safety, the number of road fatalities has
declined from a high of 30 per 100,000 people in 1970 to just less than 8 per
100,000 in 2006. The overall number of fatalities declined from 3798 in 1970 to
1456 in 2006, despite the rapid growth in the number of cars on the road.
Triggers of road rage
Road rage
probably has a negligible effect on road fatality statistics but, as the
Western Australian study shows, it may constitute a significant proportion of
violence between strangers and is therefore a phenomenon that should not be
ignored. The authors of the Western Australian study identified five ‘triggers’
that may provoke a road rage incident:
- encounters with slow drivers;
- other drivers cutting in or overtaking;
- stereotyped sex roles (attributions of driving incompetence by males about females);
- accidents between vehicles; and
- competition for parking spaces.
Minor incidents
can lead to violence partly, perhaps, because of the stress of driving. Road
rage incidents tend to occur more commonly in heavily congested traffic and are
often perpetrated by people spending long periods on the road. Moreover, being
inside the car ‘cocoon’ reduces the ability of both victims and aggressors to
defuse potentially violent situations with conciliatory gestures and language.
In the absence of such pacifying feedback, every silly act of driving could be
interpreted by an angry driver as aggressive and insulting and thus provoke an
aggressive response.
The
identification of road rage triggers may help us understand the psychology behind
road rage. The act of cutting in or overtaking, for example, can infuriate
people who feel their ‘status’ is being challenged. According to the Western
Australian study: violence is then seen as a necessary and justified response
to what is perceived to be an injustice, usually some form of degradation or
threat to the value of the self. Violence is thus a defence of honour and a
means of restoring the self.
The use of
violence to address a perceived injustice or to defend one’s wellbeing is
probably as old as the human species itself; to some extent such reactions are
an evolutionary defence mechanism designed to increase the chance of survival (Box
1: Hormonal hotheads stress and the nervous system).
Preventing road rage
Using evolutionary biology as an excuse
for road rage would burn little rubber with either the law or the victim. How
can road rage be prevented? Some psychologists recommend that people who tend
to get angry on the road should undergo relaxation therapy, while driving
manuals emphasise that drivers should use defensive driving techniques to
help diminish the risk of provoking a road rage attack. For example, following at a safe distance and using your indicator lights before changing lanes are defensive driving strategies that could minimise confrontations on the road.
Some new
technologies have also been developed in an attempt to diffuse potential road
rage incidents. One of these, the Pod, was unveiled recently by Toyota
and Sony. It replaces the traditional operating apparatus of a car the
steering wheel, gear stick and pedals with a single joystick. By simplifying
the driving task, it is hoped that fewer mistakes will be made on the road.
Moreover, the Pod monitors the driver’s stress levels and will play soothing music
and blow cool air if they rise too high.
Researchers are developing traffic control systems that allow
optimal traffic flows and therefore reduce road congestion. And the ability to
flash messages such as ‘Sorry’ to other road users has also been proposed. In
addition, an inquiry conducted in 2005 by the Victorian Drugs and Crime Prevention Committee, recommended a range of ways to reduce road rage. These included improving traffic flow, education of drivers and making road violence an offence.
Road warriors?
In the heat of
the battle, perhaps little can be done to prevent road rage, although defensive
driving should help reduce potential flashpoints. Nevertheless, despite some
media sensationalism, Australia’s road system is not a war zone, it’s just
another place where people interact and try to get along. The phenomenon of
road rage simply tells us that not everyone is capable of that.
Box
1. Hormonal hotheads stress and the nervous system
CREDITS
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