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People Texting and Driving Linked to Psychopathic Behavior: Study

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The researchers also shared some other ways to reduce cell phone use.

One of the riskiest things a driver can do while operating a vehicle is texting while driving. This causes three types of distractions: visual, manual and cognitive. This is because using your phone while driving can have dangerous consequences as it requires you to take your eyes off the road, take at least one hand off the wheel to type, and take your attention off the road. Now, a new study has found that people who typically text and drive are linked to psychopathic behavior, according to a report from the New York Post Office.

According to the new statistics, coming from interviews with around 1,000 drivers in Germany – around 73 percent of whom were women – more than 600 participants, or around 61 percent, acknowledged “problematic” use of their devices while driving. lead. Problematic smartphone users were linked to antisocial behavior, fear of missing out and three unfavorable qualities known as the “dark triad.” These include psychopathy, machismo and narcissism. In combination with other studies, the same attributes have also been associated with deliberately noisy car drivers.

“Problematic smartphone use is an excellent predictor regardless of Dark Triad personality traits. Because this factor can be changed more easily than personality, PSU should be targeted by public safety interventions, driver training, and medical evaluation -psychological assessment of driver fitness required by the court” noted the study authors.

The researchers also shared some other ways to reduce cell phone use. “It may be a good strategy to help people reduce their power supply in everyday life, which should indirectly decrease the chances of them using their phones on the road and prevent accidents and fatal collisions,” they said.

The research was published in Plos One and is titled “Navigating the Streets: How Problematic Smartphone Use, Fear of Missing Out, and Antisocial Personality Traits Are Linked to Driving Behavior.”



This story originally appeared on Ndtv.com read the full story

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