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Aaron's avatar

Right around that time headlights got blindingly bright for oncoming vehicles, I wonder if this plays a role

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Rick's avatar
Oct 16Edited

In the section on phone use, you say that it doesn't explain why the increase is so concentrated at night. But it could easily be that phone distraction is more dangerous at night than during the day: maybe it wrecks the driver's night vision, or maybe distraction is more impactful when visibility is bad. For example, a driver during the day might notice a pedestrian far down the road and decide to refrain from using their phone until they pass, whereas in a similar scenario at night, the driver is unaware of the pedestrian, decides to check their phone, and doesn't notice the pedestrian until it's too late.

More broadly, I've long suspected that US driving culture is the most carefree among economic peers. I've heard that in most other countries, licenses are harder to get and easier to lose. The US vs Canada cellphone data supports the carefree hypothesis. Other data to test it might be rates of license revocations or rates of new drivers passing their first driving test. The driving culture theory wouldn't explain the post-2009 timing or the concentration at nighttime by itself, but it could combine with one of the other factors to produce the specific effects we're seeing here.

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