Anders af Wåhlberg has apparently written this book starting from a negative attitude. He has his own ideas about what is acceptable in traffic psychology research and what is not. Throughout the book he sets his face against the established order such as the rather standard way of using accident statistics, against self-reports, well-known and widely accepted relationships such as exposure and accidents, against traffic conflict studies, and even experimental studies in simulators and instrumented vehicles. 
One of the nice things about a book such as Road Rage: Assessment and Treatment of the Angry, Aggres...
Misunderstandings in any environment can be detrimental, if not counterproductive, to the intentions...
Charles Crawford looks into the theories behind why our behaviour is not always as ethical as we thi...
The book is the selected proceedings of the second international conference of traffic and transport...
“Driver Behaviour and Training”, edited by Dr. Lisa Dorn, is based on contributions to the “First In...
The following discussion is in response to a 2010 article published in the Journal of Safety Researc...
Everyone knows that the automobile accident problem is one of the most important concerns of modem t...
Reviewer Adam Oliver finds that Richard Thaler’s new book, Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioural Ec...
Book review of Driverless: intelligent cars and the road ahead. Hod Lipson and Melba Kurma
Objective: This article provides a review of recent models of driver behavior in on-road collision s...
Context and scope: – The literature reviewed in this report is primarily UK based and published post...
'When you rise from your book, probe into what you have learned, to discover whether there is in it ...
The growing difficulties with managing congestion in road traffic have steadily increased attention ...
How much of our daily lives are influenced and co-constructed by the paradigm of automobility as ori...
This book aims to disinfect egregious practices in social science by illustrating errors commonly ma...
One of the nice things about a book such as Road Rage: Assessment and Treatment of the Angry, Aggres...
Misunderstandings in any environment can be detrimental, if not counterproductive, to the intentions...
Charles Crawford looks into the theories behind why our behaviour is not always as ethical as we thi...
The book is the selected proceedings of the second international conference of traffic and transport...
“Driver Behaviour and Training”, edited by Dr. Lisa Dorn, is based on contributions to the “First In...
The following discussion is in response to a 2010 article published in the Journal of Safety Researc...
Everyone knows that the automobile accident problem is one of the most important concerns of modem t...
Reviewer Adam Oliver finds that Richard Thaler’s new book, Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioural Ec...
Book review of Driverless: intelligent cars and the road ahead. Hod Lipson and Melba Kurma
Objective: This article provides a review of recent models of driver behavior in on-road collision s...
Context and scope: – The literature reviewed in this report is primarily UK based and published post...
'When you rise from your book, probe into what you have learned, to discover whether there is in it ...
The growing difficulties with managing congestion in road traffic have steadily increased attention ...
How much of our daily lives are influenced and co-constructed by the paradigm of automobility as ori...
This book aims to disinfect egregious practices in social science by illustrating errors commonly ma...
One of the nice things about a book such as Road Rage: Assessment and Treatment of the Angry, Aggres...
Misunderstandings in any environment can be detrimental, if not counterproductive, to the intentions...
Charles Crawford looks into the theories behind why our behaviour is not always as ethical as we thi...