Investigating Driving Styles: A Validation Study of Multidimensional Driving Styles with British and Chinese Drivers

Culture has a significant impact on driving behaviour and can play an important role in driving safety. The adaptation of traffic-related psychological instruments, developed elsewhere in new national contexts, should consider the cultural context. This paper validates the multidimensional driving s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Xu Sun, Ying Jiang, Gary Burnett, Qingfeng Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2021-01-01
Series:Advances in Civil Engineering
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8831094
id doaj-328aa5dcd9b9416abfb95c974ec9f99a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-328aa5dcd9b9416abfb95c974ec9f99a2021-10-11T00:39:49ZengHindawi LimitedAdvances in Civil Engineering1687-80942021-01-01202110.1155/2021/8831094Investigating Driving Styles: A Validation Study of Multidimensional Driving Styles with British and Chinese DriversXu Sun0Ying Jiang1Gary Burnett2Qingfeng Wang3Faculty of Science and EngineeringFaculty of Science and EngineeringHuman Factors Research GroupNottingham University Business School ChinaCulture has a significant impact on driving behaviour and can play an important role in driving safety. The adaptation of traffic-related psychological instruments, developed elsewhere in new national contexts, should consider the cultural context. This paper validates the multidimensional driving style inventory (MDSI) with two cultural samples consisting of 215 Chinese drivers and 240 British drivers. A factor analysis of the driving style yielded evidence that both datasets present some variations from the original version of the instruments in the factorial structure. The analysis of the UK sample is comparable to the previous MDSI by indicating six driving styles, namely, anxious, risky and dissociative, high-velocity and angry, patient, careful, and distress-reduction. The analysis of the Chinese participants’ dataset showed its factorial structure with 40 items of the 44 original items divided over six styles. A new dimension, namely, an inattentive driving style, appeared in the Chinese sample. These differences raise the need to validate and adapt such instruments to consider cultural specificities. Implications were also derived for driver and road safety enhancement solutions through driver behaviour applications.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8831094
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xu Sun
Ying Jiang
Gary Burnett
Qingfeng Wang
spellingShingle Xu Sun
Ying Jiang
Gary Burnett
Qingfeng Wang
Investigating Driving Styles: A Validation Study of Multidimensional Driving Styles with British and Chinese Drivers
Advances in Civil Engineering
author_facet Xu Sun
Ying Jiang
Gary Burnett
Qingfeng Wang
author_sort Xu Sun
title Investigating Driving Styles: A Validation Study of Multidimensional Driving Styles with British and Chinese Drivers
title_short Investigating Driving Styles: A Validation Study of Multidimensional Driving Styles with British and Chinese Drivers
title_full Investigating Driving Styles: A Validation Study of Multidimensional Driving Styles with British and Chinese Drivers
title_fullStr Investigating Driving Styles: A Validation Study of Multidimensional Driving Styles with British and Chinese Drivers
title_full_unstemmed Investigating Driving Styles: A Validation Study of Multidimensional Driving Styles with British and Chinese Drivers
title_sort investigating driving styles: a validation study of multidimensional driving styles with british and chinese drivers
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Advances in Civil Engineering
issn 1687-8094
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Culture has a significant impact on driving behaviour and can play an important role in driving safety. The adaptation of traffic-related psychological instruments, developed elsewhere in new national contexts, should consider the cultural context. This paper validates the multidimensional driving style inventory (MDSI) with two cultural samples consisting of 215 Chinese drivers and 240 British drivers. A factor analysis of the driving style yielded evidence that both datasets present some variations from the original version of the instruments in the factorial structure. The analysis of the UK sample is comparable to the previous MDSI by indicating six driving styles, namely, anxious, risky and dissociative, high-velocity and angry, patient, careful, and distress-reduction. The analysis of the Chinese participants’ dataset showed its factorial structure with 40 items of the 44 original items divided over six styles. A new dimension, namely, an inattentive driving style, appeared in the Chinese sample. These differences raise the need to validate and adapt such instruments to consider cultural specificities. Implications were also derived for driver and road safety enhancement solutions through driver behaviour applications.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8831094
work_keys_str_mv AT xusun investigatingdrivingstylesavalidationstudyofmultidimensionaldrivingstyleswithbritishandchinesedrivers
AT yingjiang investigatingdrivingstylesavalidationstudyofmultidimensionaldrivingstyleswithbritishandchinesedrivers
AT garyburnett investigatingdrivingstylesavalidationstudyofmultidimensionaldrivingstyleswithbritishandchinesedrivers
AT qingfengwang investigatingdrivingstylesavalidationstudyofmultidimensionaldrivingstyleswithbritishandchinesedrivers
_version_ 1716829098888658944