A study has shown that people tend to view driving-related dangers differently to if they were caused by something other than cars.
The latest research by Dr Ian Walker, an environmental psychology professor at Swansea University, found that British people are more accepting of issues and dangers caused by motor vehicles that they otherwise would not be accepting of elsewhere.
Describing the attitude as "motonomativity", in the paper 'Motonomativity: How Social Norms Hide a Major Public Health Hazard', Walker along with co-authors Alan Tapp and Adrian Davis suggest that the "motonormative thought style is as endemic amongst government and the medical profession as in the general population", with potential implications for policy.
> Why aren't more people cycling and walking when fuel prices are at record highs? We talk to Dr Ian Walker on the road.cc Podcast
By randomly assigning a pool of 2,157 people (drivers and non-drivers) one of two sets of questions (near identical, just with a couple of words edited to make relevant to a driving or non-driving-related risk) the rearchers were able to determine "unconscious biases due to cultural assumptions about the role of private cars".
For example, while 75 per cent of people agreed that 'people shouldn't smoke in highly populated areas where other people have to breathe in the cigarette fumes', only 17 per cent agreed with the same statement changed to 'people shouldn't drive in highly populated areas where other people have to breathe in the car fumes'.
Likewise, 37 per cent believed the police needed to take action if someone left their belongings in the street leading to them being stolen, but 87 per cent agreed with the word 'belongings' replaced by 'car'.
While 61 per cent of people agreed that risk is a 'natural part of driving', just 31 per cent agreed that risk is a 'natural part of work'.
"It is nonsensical to say that making people breathe toxic air is a problem when it comes from a cigarette, but making people breathe toxic air is fine when it comes from a car," Dr Walker said.
"The underlying principle is the same, but people in our study were not using the same standards when they judged the two things.
"It's long been suspected that people can slip unconsciously into using different standards when they think about driving, leading them to commit a fallacy known as 'special pleading'. Our study was intended to reveal this phenomenon and show just how substantial these effects can be."
Co-author Dr Davis also explained that it was not just a problem seen in the driving population of the research.
"When we pulled out just the people in our survey who didn't drive, we saw that even these people were using different standards when the questions asked about driving," he said.
"Their answers tended to echo what the drivers were saying, meaning it's not even simple self-interest at work. It's got to be something deeper, rooted in our culture."
And commenting on the same bias slipping into the minds of policy makers at government level and within the medical profession, co-author Tapp explained one example of an implication for policy.
"If you asked a politician whether a new hospital should be inaccessible to one-fifth of the population, obviously they'd say 'no'," he suggested.
"Whereas if you asked that same politician whether a hospital should be built on the edge of town, it's likely that many wouldn't see the problem, if they have a form of this mindset we're looking at. But in practice, having the hospital outside town is not that different from making it inaccessible when a fifth of households don't have a car."
Professor Walker added: "Every decision maker needs to get used to asking themselves, 'What's the underlying principle we're considering here, and would I still be happy with it if we were talking about something other than road transport?"
Add new comment
43 comments
And yet it's an article about - er- an article by Dr Ian Walker, who does a lot of stuff about active travel. I'd count it as relevant. Not about sports cycling, if that's what worries you but definitely relevant to the "travel environment".
A few years ago I went for a haircut. The barber did a reasonable job, quite nice I thought, but when he finished he said, "would you like your eyebrows trimming sir?" Well I've got hardly any eyebrows to speak of - I'm no Noel Galllagher by any means. It doesn't bother me that much, it's not held me back in life at all. I'm sure he was making fun of me but I just made my excuses and left. I wish I'd told him where he could shove his eyebrow trimmers now. I didn't leave a tip though. And I didn't go back.
Perhaps the "cultural blind spot that makes people apply double standards when they think about driving" (source: Ian Walker) doesn't hold any interest for you personally. But I can assure you that it is hugely relevant to the vast majority of road.cc's regular readers and commenters.
Peter Walker's Guardian article, mentioned elsewhere on this site, begins with the words:
"British people appear to have an in-built acceptance of risks and harms from motor vehicles that they would not accept in other parts of life"
This is a very big deal.
As far as I know nobody has said that the content on road.cc was curated solely for your tastes and preferences.
and yet does the Guardian print stories on every car crash every day that kills people, or only the ones that involve Tesla's ?
Tesla stories are novel (and get more clicks), particularly the so-called self-driving cars. And everybody loves to read about the huge promises - and inevitable failings - of new technology.
Local papers handle the day-to-death death and injury toll, just as Premiership footballers get torn apart in the nationals while Shrewsbury Town players would normally only get namechecked in the Shropshire Slur.
At least the Guardian's has the Bike Blog, is generally supportive of cycling and active travel. The Times did one brief pro-cycling splurge after Mary Bowers' horrible injuries with their Cities Fit For Cycling campaign (notably Kaya Burgess) but went back to its pro-car gedouttamyway format soon afterwards. The Independent's "Save our cyclists" campaign (2011?) fizzled out after a couple of headlines. The species that get paid to write for the Mail and the Scum detest cyclists and consider them lower than vermin.
the bike blog is hidden away in the environment section, its not about cycling per se, the other newspapers are doing nothing more than getting more clicks like the Tesla stories.
and local papers, though most seem owned by media conglomerates and written by AI thesedays, actually do miss a surprisingly large number of stories about crashes, injuries, deaths kind of only make it in if the police tell the paper about it.
I just think its an interesting point a Tesla injuring/killing someone is considered more newsworthy than any other type of vehicle that daily injures & kills far more people, and yet we're complaining that Britons have normalised the dangers of driving, even though weve clearly normalised the reporting of the impact of something where 5 people die every day, because its not considered newsworthy or click baity enough.
I'll click on a Tesla story.
1) I genuinely think cyclists will be safer with AI driving the car rather than meat (eventually)
2) I have a gruesome fascination with the bizarre cult round Tesla/Musk. Weirdos.
1) We're likely to have teleportation before we have autonomous cars.
2) You realise that makes you one of those wierdos don't you?
1) I'd like you to be wrong but I wouldn't argue it
2) everyone has to have a hobby
Plenty of sports cycling sites out there if that's all you want. Road.cc covers a wide spectrum of cycling. A lot of the contributors on the forum will be utility cyclists and issues here will concern them. I've found there to be a good range of subjects covered.
We need more like this really
https://newsthump.com/2023/01/17/the-five-best-service-stations-at-which...
You've got to hand it to the early motoring pioneers and the car marketing men: they have done a grand job of conditioning most people to normalise and accept the dangerous mayhem, inconvenience, that cars inflict on all of us from the moment we leave our front doors.
Sad but true...
Pages