Pete317 wrote:
'There's also a strong psychological aspect to this. ' ....
'the faster you travel the further ahead you look.'
And a part of the brain's speeding-up process is by a process of
simplification. You re-define your brain's priorities and opt voluntarily for
a form of temporary tunnel-vision. You are concentrating your
attention, and in particular your short-term visual memory, onto reading
that road in front of you. You rigorously restrict your mental processes
and observation to 'Reading The Road': vehicles, road-signs etc. You
ignore all irrelevancies such as pretty girls or roadside advertising.
It's sounds very well in theory. And I certainly don't have any quarrel
with a properly trained police driver whizzing down the motorway in his
patrol car while responding to an emergency or during
refresher-training.
But no-one ever went wrong by under-estimating the driving ability of the
general public.
As Pete 317 so rightly says, ''the faster you travel the further ahead you
look' and for a lot of drivers that can be Tunnel Vision. The man who
doesn't notice the pretty girls may not be seeing the cyclists or the
pedestrians either.
I'm sorry if I sound bitter tonight but I came close to being 'taken-out'
while crossing the road this afternoon, and my experience may be
relevant to this discussion.
I was walking along one of my regular routes and I was crossing a road
at a particular point where a traffic island makes it a safe and easy
spot to do so. As is often the case I had to wait a few minutes at the
kerbside for a suitable gap in the traffic and then, when the opportunity
came, and I could see that it was safe, I stepped out into the road.
Wow !, I had to jump straight back. A car, with a veiled Muslim woman
driving, whipped round the corner 'like-a-bat-out-of-Hell'.
Her face wasn't fully covered but she her head was closely wrapped-up
in a wimple, with a large wide black sheet worn over the top of it. The
style was very like that of the nuns of sixty years ago.
She could have had no side-vision, and I would say that, as with those
old-fashioned nuns, the purpose of her head-covering was to
promote 'custody-of-the-eyes'; the idea being that it is immodest for a
woman to cast her eyes about and that tunnel-vision is virtuous.
I can assure you that their restricted vision certainly makes them faster
drivers. I saw that well enough this afternoon, and I have seen it often
enough around here.
Veiled women are a category of driver who can easily be identified as
concentrating their vision on the road that is in front of them and,
probably because of that, they certainly drive a lot faster than other
people.
But what I've seen of them doesn't make good evidence to support the
'Drive Faster, Drive Safer' theory. In fact I don't understand how they
manage to pass their Driving Tests.