- World Health Organization. Global status report on road safety 2018: Summary. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization; 2018: 1-20.
- Roth G. Global Burden of Disease Collaborative Network. Global Burden of Disease Study 2017 (GBD 2017) Results. Seattle, United States: Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), 2018. The Lancet 2018; 392: 1736-88.
- Zakeri R, Nosratnejad S, Sadeghi-Bazargani H, Dalal K, Yousefi M. The economic burden of road traffic injuries until one-year after hospitalization: A survey study. Accid Anal Prev 2021; 163: 106459.
- Cociu S, Ioncu O, Cazacu-Stratu C, Ceban S, Hamann C. The major risk factors for road traffic injuries. One health and risk management 2021; 2(4S): 84.
- Adanu EK, Jones S. Effects of human-centered factors on crash injury severities. J Adv Transport 2017; 2017: 1-11.
- Gargoum SA, El-Basyouny K. Exploring the association between speed and safety: A path analysis approach. Accid Anal Prev 2016; 93: 32-40.
- Doecke SD, Kloeden CN, Dutschke JK, Baldock MR. Safe speed limits for a safe system: The relationship between speed limit and fatal crash rate for different crash types. Traffic Injury Prev 2018; 19(4): 404-8.
- Ma Z, Zhao W, Steven I, Chien J, Dong C. Exploring factors contributing to crash injury severity on rural two-lane highways. J Saf Res 2015; 55: 171-6.
- Yu B, Chen Y, Bao S. Quantifying visual road environment to establish a speeding prediction model: an examination using naturalistic driving data. Accid Anal Prev 2019; 129: 289-98.
- Yousefifard M, Toloui A, Ahmadzadeh K, Gubari MI, Neishaboori AM, Amraei F, et al. Risk factors for road traffic injury-related mortality in Iran; a systematic review and meta-analysis. Arch Acad Emerg Med 2021; 9(1): e61.
- Li Z, Man SS, Chan AHS, Zhu J. Integration of theory of planned behavior, sensation seeking, and risk perception to explain the risky driving behavior of truck drivers. Sustainability 2021; 13(9): 5214.
- Starkey NJ, Isler RB. The role of executive function, personality and attitudes to risks in explaining self-reported driving behaviour in adolescent and adult male drivers. Transp Res Part F Traffic Psychol Behav 2016; 38: 127-36.
- Yıldırım-Yenier Z, Vingilis E, Wiesenthal DL, Mann RE, Seeley J. Relationships between thrill seeking, speeding attitudes, and driving violations among a sample of motorsports spectators and drivers. Accid Anal Prev 2016; 86: 16-22.
- Stephens A, Nieuwesteeg M, Page-Smith J, Fitzharris M. Self-reported speed compliance and attitudes towards speeding in a representative sample of drivers in Australia. Accid Anal Prev 2017; 103: 56-64.
- Elliott MA, Thomson JA, Robertson K, Stephenson C, Wicks J. Evidence that changes in social cognitions predict changes in self-reported driver behavior: Causal analyses of two-wave panel data. Accid Anal Prev 2013; 50: 905-16.
- Lheureux F, Auzoult L, Charlois C, Hardy‐Massard S, Minary JP. Traffic Offences: Planned or Habitual? Using the T heory of P lanned B ehaviour and habit strength to explain frequency and magnitude of speeding and driving under the influence of alcohol. Br J Psychol 2016; 107(1): 52-71.
- Conner M, Sparks P, Povey R, James R, Shepherd R, Armitage CJ. Moderator effects of attitudinal ambivalence on attitude–behaviour relationships. Eur J Soc Psychol 2002; 32(5): 705-18.
- Elliott MA, Brewster SE, Thomson JA, Malcolm C, Rasmussen S. Testing the bi‐dimensional effects of attitudes on behavioural intentions and subsequent behaviour. Br J Psychol 2015; 106(4): 656-74.
- McCartan R, Elliott MA. Bi-dimensional attitudes, attitude accessibility and speeding behaviour. Transp Res Part F Traffic Psychol Behav 2018; 58: 581-93.
- McCartan R, Elliott MA, Pagani S, Finnegan E, Kelly SW. Testing the effects of explicit and implicit bidimensional attitudes on objectively measured speeding behaviour. Br J Soc Psychol 2018; 57(3): 630-51.
- McCartan RA. Using cognitive dissonance inducing interventions to change drivers' attitudes towards speeding and reduce speeding behaviour. Ph.D.Dissertation. United Kingdom: University of Strathclyde, School of Psychological Sciences and Health, 2020: 38-50.
- Richetin J, Conner M, Perugini M. Not doing is not the opposite of doing: Implications for attitudinal models of behavioral prediction. Pers Soc Psychol Bull 2011; 37(1): 40-54.
- Paris H, Van den Broucke S. Measuring cognitive determinants of speeding: An application of the theory of planned behaviour. Transp Res Part F Traffic Psychol Behav 2008; 11(3): 168-80.
- Letirand F, Delhomme P. Speed behaviour as a choice between observing and exceeding the speed limit. Transp Res Part F Traffic Psychol Behav 2005; 8(6): 481-92.
- Tabachnick BG, Fidell LS, Ullman JB. Using multivariate statistics, Vol 5. Boston: Pearson Boston, MA; 2007: 481-95.
- Ajzen I. The theory of planned behavior: Frequently asked questions. Hum Behav Emerg Technol 2020; 2(4): 314-24.
- Cumming G. Inference by eye: Reading the overlap of independent confidence intervals. Stat Med 2009; 28(2): 205-20.
- Elliott MA, Lee E, Robertson JS, Innes R. Evidence that attitude accessibility augments the relationship between speeding attitudes and speeding behavior: A test of the MODE model in the context of driving. Accid Anal Prev 2015; 74: 49-59.
- Van Huysduynen HH, Terken J, Eggen B. The relation between self-reported driving style and driving behaviour: A simulator study. Transp Res Part F Traffic Psychol Behav 2018; 56: 245-55.
|