< %=imgalt%>
Britney Spears ~ MTV Video Music Awards ~ Angelina Jolie ~ Jennifer Lopez ~ All Celebrities ~ All Actress ~ All Actors ~ All Singers
Home / Entertainment News / 2008 / March 2008 / March 29, 2008
Moaning men responsible for bad women drivers

Entertainment News

Dead junkie pals pic made Cheryl Cole stay off drugs for life
English singer Cheryl Cole has revealed that it was seeing a picture of a dead heroin junkie friend of hers that put her off from ever trying drugs. ANI

Insecure Kerry Katona hires detectives to spy on hubbys ex flames
English singer Kerry Katona is so fearful that her hubby Mark Croft is going to ditch her and go back to his two old flames that she has hired detectives to spy on his lovers. ANI

Posh, Becks stand to lose 2m pounds on Madrid mansion
English pop singer Victoria and her football hubby David Beckham have been hit by the global credit crunch, and they are unable to sell off their Madrid mansion. ANI

Moaning men responsible for bad women drivers

Constant negative comments about your wifes driving abilities will only elevate her chances of running over pedestrians, says a new Australian research.

London, Mar 29 : Constant negative comments about your wife's driving abilities will only elevate her chances of running over pedestrians, says a new Australian research.

According to the study, led by Dr Courtney von Hippel, a leading psychologist, women who are chided while driving are more than twice as likely to make mistakes as those who have no 'constructive criticism' from their male passengers.

"When people are confronted with negative stereotypes about themselves they seem to experience an extra mental load, which can decrease their performance on a task. There can be subtle things happening in the environment while a woman is driving, like a male driver shaking his head when she tries to reverse park a car," the Telegraph quoted von Hippel, as saying.

In the study, the researchers recruited 168 female university students.

Half the participants in one experiment heard that the study would investigate why men are better drivers than women and were told that the simulation would test the gender difference in driving abilities.

The control group heard no mention of gender differences but were told that the driving task would investigate the mental processes involved in driving.

Nearly half of the drivers in the 'stereotype threat' group hit a jaywalking pedestrian who unexpectedly appeared in the simulation.

Another experiment used the same driving simulation to show that participants who were distracted by a grammatical test were also twice as likely to hit the jaywalker.

"For safety reasons, our stereotype threat manipulation had to be quite contrived," said von Hippel.

"But it shows that it would be worth doing a more thorough investigation, perhaps an observational study, to discover what is going on here," added von Hippel.

The study is published in the journal Accident Analysis and Prevention.

ANI

October 13, 2008

October 12, 2008

October 11, 2008

October 10, 2008

October 9, 2008

October 8, 2008