“…This emotion explains the variance observed in road accidents to a greater extent than other personality traits, such as conscientiousness and sensation seeking, which have also been strongly related to driving risk (Dahlen, Martin, Ragan, & Kuhlman, 2005; Dahlen & White, 2006). Driving anger has a negative influence on some cognitive variables, such as attention, perception and information processing (Bone & Mowen, 2006; Deffenbacher, Deffenbacher, Lynch, & Richards, 2003), and this type of anger has been related to infractions (Underwood, Chapman, Wright, & Crundall, 1999) and to risky and aggressive driving behaviours (Deffenbacher, Lynch, Filetti, Dahlen, & Oetting, 2003; Deffenbacher, White, & Lynch, 2004; Herrero-Fernández, Fonseca-Baeza, & Pla-Sancho, 2014; Jovanovic, Stanojevic, & Stanojevic, 2011). In addition, few differences have been found in anger by gender, likely because of the effect of anonymity (Ellison-Potter, Bell, & Deffenbacher, 2001).…”