Personality, Executive Control, and Neurobiological Characteristics Associated with Different Forms of Risky Driving.
BACKGROUND:Road crashes represent a huge burden on global health. Some drivers are prone to repeated episodes of risky driving (RD) and are over-represented in crashes and related morbidity. However, their characteristics are heterogeneous, hampering development of targeted intervention strategies....
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doaj-7f31e61390c3453d8505e6100bb88a492020-11-24T22:06:25ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01112e015022710.1371/journal.pone.0150227Personality, Executive Control, and Neurobiological Characteristics Associated with Different Forms of Risky Driving.Thomas G BrownMarie Claude OuimetManal EldebJacques TremblayEvelyn VingilisLouise NadeauJens PruessnerAntoine BecharaBACKGROUND:Road crashes represent a huge burden on global health. Some drivers are prone to repeated episodes of risky driving (RD) and are over-represented in crashes and related morbidity. However, their characteristics are heterogeneous, hampering development of targeted intervention strategies. This study hypothesized that distinct personality, cognitive, and neurobiological processes are associated with the type of RD behaviours these drivers predominantly engage in. METHODS:Four age-matched groups of adult (19-39 years) males were recruited: 1) driving while impaired recidivists (DWI, n = 36); 2) non-alcohol reckless drivers (SPEED, n = 28); 3) drivers with a mixed RD profile (MIXED, n = 27); and 4) low-risk control drivers (CTL, n = 47). Their sociodemographic, criminal history, driving behaviour (by questionnaire and simulation performance), personality (Big Five traits, impulsivity, reward sensitivity), cognitive (disinhibition, decision making, behavioural risk taking), and neurobiological (cortisol stress response) characteristics were gathered and contrasted. RESULTS:Compared to controls, group SPEED showed greater sensation seeking, disinhibition, disadvantageous decision making, and risk taking. Group MIXED exhibited more substance misuse, and antisocial, sensation seeking and reward sensitive personality features. Group DWI showed greater disinhibition and more severe alcohol misuse, and compared to the other RD groups, the lowest level of risk taking when sober. All RD groups exhibited less cortisol increase in response to stress compared to controls. DISCUSSION:Each RD group exhibited a distinct personality and cognitive profile, which was consistent with stimulation seeking in group SPEED, fearlessness in group MIXED, and poor behavioural regulation associated with alcohol in group DWI. As these group differences were uniformly accompanied by blunted cortisol stress responses, they may reflect the disparate behavioural consequences of dysregulation of the stress system. In sum, RD preference appears to be a useful marker for clarifying explanatory pathways to risky driving, and for research into developing more personalized prevention efforts.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4766103?pdf=render |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Thomas G Brown Marie Claude Ouimet Manal Eldeb Jacques Tremblay Evelyn Vingilis Louise Nadeau Jens Pruessner Antoine Bechara |
spellingShingle |
Thomas G Brown Marie Claude Ouimet Manal Eldeb Jacques Tremblay Evelyn Vingilis Louise Nadeau Jens Pruessner Antoine Bechara Personality, Executive Control, and Neurobiological Characteristics Associated with Different Forms of Risky Driving. PLoS ONE |
author_facet |
Thomas G Brown Marie Claude Ouimet Manal Eldeb Jacques Tremblay Evelyn Vingilis Louise Nadeau Jens Pruessner Antoine Bechara |
author_sort |
Thomas G Brown |
title |
Personality, Executive Control, and Neurobiological Characteristics Associated with Different Forms of Risky Driving. |
title_short |
Personality, Executive Control, and Neurobiological Characteristics Associated with Different Forms of Risky Driving. |
title_full |
Personality, Executive Control, and Neurobiological Characteristics Associated with Different Forms of Risky Driving. |
title_fullStr |
Personality, Executive Control, and Neurobiological Characteristics Associated with Different Forms of Risky Driving. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Personality, Executive Control, and Neurobiological Characteristics Associated with Different Forms of Risky Driving. |
title_sort |
personality, executive control, and neurobiological characteristics associated with different forms of risky driving. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS ONE |
issn |
1932-6203 |
publishDate |
2016-01-01 |
description |
BACKGROUND:Road crashes represent a huge burden on global health. Some drivers are prone to repeated episodes of risky driving (RD) and are over-represented in crashes and related morbidity. However, their characteristics are heterogeneous, hampering development of targeted intervention strategies. This study hypothesized that distinct personality, cognitive, and neurobiological processes are associated with the type of RD behaviours these drivers predominantly engage in. METHODS:Four age-matched groups of adult (19-39 years) males were recruited: 1) driving while impaired recidivists (DWI, n = 36); 2) non-alcohol reckless drivers (SPEED, n = 28); 3) drivers with a mixed RD profile (MIXED, n = 27); and 4) low-risk control drivers (CTL, n = 47). Their sociodemographic, criminal history, driving behaviour (by questionnaire and simulation performance), personality (Big Five traits, impulsivity, reward sensitivity), cognitive (disinhibition, decision making, behavioural risk taking), and neurobiological (cortisol stress response) characteristics were gathered and contrasted. RESULTS:Compared to controls, group SPEED showed greater sensation seeking, disinhibition, disadvantageous decision making, and risk taking. Group MIXED exhibited more substance misuse, and antisocial, sensation seeking and reward sensitive personality features. Group DWI showed greater disinhibition and more severe alcohol misuse, and compared to the other RD groups, the lowest level of risk taking when sober. All RD groups exhibited less cortisol increase in response to stress compared to controls. DISCUSSION:Each RD group exhibited a distinct personality and cognitive profile, which was consistent with stimulation seeking in group SPEED, fearlessness in group MIXED, and poor behavioural regulation associated with alcohol in group DWI. As these group differences were uniformly accompanied by blunted cortisol stress responses, they may reflect the disparate behavioural consequences of dysregulation of the stress system. In sum, RD preference appears to be a useful marker for clarifying explanatory pathways to risky driving, and for research into developing more personalized prevention efforts. |
url |
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4766103?pdf=render |
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