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Vanessa Beanland

Researcher at University of Otago

Publications -  63
Citations -  1149

Vanessa Beanland is an academic researcher from University of Otago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Inattentional blindness. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 62 publications receiving 868 citations. Previous affiliations of Vanessa Beanland include Australian National University & Monash University, Clayton campus.

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Driver inattention and driver distraction in serious casualty crashes: Data from the Australian National Crash In-depth Study

TL;DR: In-depth data from the Australian National Crash In-depth Study indicates that a majority of serious injury crashes involve driver inattention, and most forms of inatt attention and distraction observed are preventable.
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Is there a case for driver training? A review of the efficacy of pre- and post-licence driver training

TL;DR: The results of the review indicate that some forms of training have been effective for procedural skill acquisition and other programs have been found to improve drivers' hazard perception, and evidence suggests that traditional driver training programs have not reduced young drivers' crash risk.
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Systematic review of driving simulator validation studies

TL;DR: The findings suggest that the reporting of driving simulator studies requires improvement, particularly around the validation evidence associated with the simulator, the specific details of the simulated driving environment, and the outputs of statistical analyses.
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Looking without seeing or seeing without looking? Eye movements in sustained inattentional blindness.

TL;DR: Results indicate that eye movements do not predict IB; noticers and nonnoticers were equally likely to fixate on or near the unexpected item, often for similar durations; and perceptual load also determines whether observers will fixate the unexpected object.
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Personality domains and traits that predict self-reported aberrant driving behaviours in a southeastern US university sample.

TL;DR: A comprehensive measure of personality was used to investigate which personality traits are most predictive of four types of aberrant driving behaviour as indicated by the Manchester Driver Behaviour Questionnaire (DBQ).