Cognitive, sensory and physical factors enabling driving safety in older adults

KJ Anstey, J Wood, S Lord, JG Walker - Clinical psychology review, 2005 - Elsevier
Clinical psychology review, 2005Elsevier
We reviewed literature on cognitive, sensory, motor and physical factors associated with
safe driving and crash risk in older adults with the goal of developing a model of factors
enabling safe driving behaviour. Thirteen empirical studies reporting associations between
cognitive, sensory, motor and physical factors and either self-reported crashes, state crash
records or on-road driving measures were identified. Measures of attention, reaction time,
memory, executive function, mental status, visual function, and physical function variables …
We reviewed literature on cognitive, sensory, motor and physical factors associated with safe driving and crash risk in older adults with the goal of developing a model of factors enabling safe driving behaviour. Thirteen empirical studies reporting associations between cognitive, sensory, motor and physical factors and either self-reported crashes, state crash records or on-road driving measures were identified. Measures of attention, reaction time, memory, executive function, mental status, visual function, and physical function variables were associated with driving outcome measures. Self-monitoring was also identified as a factor that may moderate observed effects by influencing driving behavior. We propose that three enabling factors (cognition, sensory function and physical function/medical conditions) predict driving ability, but that accurate self-monitoring of these enabling factors is required for safe driving behaviour.
Elsevier
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果