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Zahra Tabibi

Researcher at Ferdowsi University of Mashhad

Publications -  42
Citations -  496

Zahra Tabibi is an academic researcher from Ferdowsi University of Mashhad. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 41 publications receiving 377 citations. Previous affiliations of Zahra Tabibi include University of Lincoln.

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Choosing a safe place to cross the road: the relationship between attention and identification of safe and dangerous road‐crossing sites

TL;DR: Results indicated that attention is required for identifying road-crossing sites quickly and accurately, especially for younger children, and road safety training programmes for children may need to take into account the development of children's attention.
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Aggression, emotional self-regulation, attentional bias, and cognitive inhibition predict risky driving behavior.

TL;DR: Correlation and regression analyses showed that aggression and emotional regulation predicted risky driving behavior and aggression was the only significant predictive factor for driving violations.
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Predicting aberrant driving behaviour: the role of executive function

TL;DR: Income control related to different aspects of driving indicating that impulsivity may underlie various aberrant driving behaviour and crashes, and poor inhibitory control could result in aberrantdriving behaviour causing conflict and leading to crashes.
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Finding a safe place to cross the road: the effect of distractors and the role of attention in children's identification of safe and dangerous road-crossing sites

TL;DR: This paper examined the effect of distractors on children's ability to identify safe and dangerous road crossing sites and examined the relationship between identification of safe/dangerous sites and attention (selective attention, attention switching, sustained attention and divided attention).
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Aberrant Driving Behaviour, Risk Involvement, and Their Related Factors Among Taxi Drivers

TL;DR: The results showed that being a single driver, having a high annual driving mileage, and a high number of daily taxi trips were positively associated with accident involvement and there was a positive correlation between the more ordinary violations and aggressive violations and accident involvement.