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Bradley J. Anderson

Researcher at Mississippi State University

Publications -  8
Citations -  369

Bradley J. Anderson is an academic researcher from Mississippi State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Driving under the influence. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 8 publications receiving 361 citations.

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An exploratory study of the relationship between road rage and crash experience in a representative sample of US drivers.

TL;DR: Results suggest that angry/ threatening driving is related to crash involvement; however, after controlling for exposure and angry/threatening and hazardous driving the relationship of milder expressions of frustration while driving and crash involvement was not significant.
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Personality traits and behaviors of alcohol-impaired drivers: a comparison of first and multiple offenders.

TL;DR: Using an interview and questionnaire format, driving under the influence of alcohol (DUI) first offenders and multiple offenders were compared on measures of personality traits, drinking behavior and problems, and driving behavior and history and indicated that multiple offenderswere significantly higher in hostility, sensation seeking, psychopathic deviance, mania, and depression.
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Long‐term Effectiveness of Probation, Short‐term Intervention and LAI Administration for Reducing DUI Recidivism

TL;DR: A small but statistically significant effect of probation for reducing long-term recidivism was found for offenders classified both as low-risk and high-risk drinkers and an interaction effect of combining probation with short-term intervention was not statistically significant after the longer tracking period.
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Comparing the predictive validity of DUI risk screening instruments: development of validation standards.

TL;DR: Standards for validation of risk prediction instruments were developed based on the analyses to illustrate how failure to use equivalent standards have led to erroneous conclusions concerning the relative predictive efficacy of different risk Prediction instruments.
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Behavior and personality traits among DUI arrestees, nonarrested impaired drivers, and nonimpaired drivers.

TL;DR: It was found that impaired drivers arrested after an accident or moving violation were significantly higher in hostility, psychopathic deviance, nontraffic arrests, frequency of impaired driving, accidents after drinking, and drinks consumed per week than impaired drivers caught in roadblocks.