Altogether, 1448 individuals from six neighbouring countries of Russia in the Baltic Sea region (Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Belarus) described a 'typical' member of their own nation and a 'typical' Russian, as well as rated their own personality, using the National Character Survey (NCS). Results suggest that national character stereotypes are widely shared, temporally stable and moderately related to assessed personality traits, if all assessments are made using the same measurement instrument. In all studied countries, agreement between national auto-stereotypes and assessed personality was positive and in half of the samples statistically significant. Although members of the six nations studied had a relatively similar view of the Russian national character, this view was not related with self-rated personality traits of Russians but moderately with the Russian auto-stereotype.
Recent years have seen a growing interest in the problem of aggressive driving. In the present
study two demographic variables (gender and age), two non-psychological driving-experience
related variables (annual mileage and legal driving experience in years) and aggressiveness as
a personality trait (including behavioural and affective components) as psychological variable
of individual differences were examined as potential predictors of aggressive driving. The aim
of the study was to find out the best predictors of aggressive driving behaviour. The study was
based on an online survey, and 228 vehicle drivers in Latvia participated in it. The questionnaire
included eight-item Aggressive Driving Scale (Bone & Mowen, 2006), short Latvian version
of the Buss-Perry Aggression Questionnaire (AQ; Buss & Perry, 1992), and questions gaining
demographic and driving experience information. Gender, age and annual mileage predicted
aggressive driving: being male, young and with higher annual driving exposure were associated
with higher scores on aggressive driving. Dispositional aggressiveness due to anger component
was a significant predictor of aggressive diving score. Physical aggression and hostility were
unrelated to aggressive driving. Altogether, the predictors explained a total of 28% of the
variance in aggressive driving behaviour. Findings show that dispositional aggressiveness,
especially the anger component, as well as male gender, young age and higher annual mileage
has a predictive validity in relation to aggressive driving. There is a need to extend the scope of
potential dispositional predictors pertinent to driving aggression.
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