pip wrote:
The Rush wrote:
Gambling and economics aside, most drivers 'predict' what other drivers will do correctly upwards of 99% of the time.
That's the big problem. If someone predicts falsely once in each thousand times, and if he depends on being right because he _thinks_ he's good at predicting things, then he's headed for the emergency ward

To be good at predicting drivers, you need to be right much more than 99.9% of the time, or do as you do, and cut yourself some slack.
The only times I've been headed for the emergency ward, are those times when that was my original destination to begin with, or my client's.
Leaving margin for error is what allows the majority of false predictions to come to 'no harm done'. Most drivers leave margins of either space, or time, or as I like to call it, spacetime - aka as adjusting one's driving to suit road and traffic conditions.
The major error is to leave oneself with no margin of attention. Only good attention and situational awareness allow drivers to proactively give themselves enough spacetime to react so that another driver's errors result in, at worst, a mild preventive or evasive maneuvre followed by some mumbling and a finger wag. As a novice driver, good attention and observational habits will provide the lessons that create good predictions.
People who are regularly wrong
a) haven't been paying enough attention (multiply experience times proper observational habits)
b) lack empathy, the ability to think like someone other than themselves, or both
c) can still avoid breaking the first two rules in my sig by leaving themselves - and everyone else, for that matter - some slack.
I suppose the only thing left, would be to determine how much slack is 'necessary'. That could be a big problem, as I know that my spacetime margins contract a bit when I'm going to meet a fare, or when the fare requests that I 'step on it'. I then try my best to put myself in situations where I have a better than 99.9% predictive accuracy.
To a novice, every situation is inherently very unpredictable, but for both the novice and the seasoned driver, the answer is not to put your car where your eyes and your mind haven't been, or couldn't drive away from, even if you are in a Rush
