Hayashi Yusuke, Miller Kimberly, Foreman Anne M, Wirth Oliver
Pennsylvania State University, Hazleton, 76 University Drive, Hazleton, PA 18202, USA.
Pennsylvania State University, Hazleton, 76 University Drive, Hazleton, PA 18202, USA.
Accid Anal Prev. 2016 Dec;97:132-140. doi: 10.1016/j.aap.2016.08.028. Epub 2016 Sep 10.
The purpose of the present study was to examine an impulsive decision-making process underlying texting while driving from a behavioral economic perspective. A sample of 108 college students completed a novel discounting task that presented participants with a hypothetical scenario in which, after receiving a text message while driving, they rated the likelihood of replying to a text message immediately versus waiting to reply for a specific period of time. Participants also completed a delay discounting task in which they made repeated hypothetical choices between obtaining a larger amount of money available after a delay and an equal or lesser amount of money available immediately. The results show that the duration of the delay is a critical variable that strongly determines whether participants choose to wait to reply to a text message, and that the decrease in the likelihood of waiting as a function of delay is best described by a hyperbolic delay discounting function. The results also show that participants who self-reported higher frequency of texting while driving discounted the opportunity to reply to a text message at greater rates, whereas there was no relation between the rates of discounting of hypothetical monetary rewards and the frequency of texting while driving. The results support the conclusion that texting while driving is fundamentally an impulsive choice.
本研究的目的是从行为经济学角度考察开车时发短信背后的冲动决策过程。108名大学生参与了一项新颖的折扣任务,该任务为参与者呈现了一个假设情景:他们在开车时收到短信后,需要对立即回复短信与等待特定时间后回复短信的可能性进行评分。参与者还完成了一项延迟折扣任务,在该任务中,他们要在延迟后获得一笔较多金额的钱与立即获得一笔相等或较少金额的钱之间反复做出假设选择。结果表明,延迟时长是一个关键变量,它强烈决定了参与者是否选择等待回复短信,并且等待可能性随延迟时间的减少最适合用双曲线延迟折扣函数来描述。结果还表明,自我报告开车时发短信频率较高的参与者,对回复短信机会的折扣率更高,而假设货币奖励的折扣率与开车时发短信的频率之间没有关系。这些结果支持了这样一个结论:开车时发短信从根本上来说是一种冲动选择。