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From the moment I heard about it, I couldn’t wait to get my hands on Tom Vanderbilt’s new book about traffic. I’m sure I wasn’t the only one. Haven’t we all pondered the mysteries of traffic endlessly (at least, it feels endless when you're stuck in it)? After all, traffic is as pervasive as the common cold, except bigger, more relevant. Even the sickliest among us comes down with colds only intermittently.
Read the Full ReviewWould you be surprised that road rage can be good for society? Or that most crashes happen on sunny, dry days? That our minds can trick us into thinking the next lane is moving faster? Or that you can gauge a nation’s driving behavior by its levels of corruption? These are only a few of the remarkable dynamics that Tom Vanderbilt explores in this fascinating tour through the mysteries of the road.
Based on exhaustive research and interviews with driving experts and traffic officials around the globe, Traffic gets under the hood of the everyday activity of driving to uncover the surprisingly complex web of physical, psychological, and technical factors that explain how traffic works, why we drive the way we do, and what our driving says about us. Vanderbilt examines the perceptual limits and cognitive underpinnings that make us worse drivers than we think we are. He demonstrates why plans to protect pedestrians from cars often lead to more accidents. He shows how roundabouts, which can feel dangerous and chaotic, actually make roads safer—and reduce traffic in the bargain. He uncovers who is more likely to honk at whom, and why. He explains why traffic jams form, outlines the unintended consequences of our quest for safety, and even identifies the most common mistake drivers make in parking lots.
The car has long been a central part of American life; whether we see it as a symbol of freedom or a symptom of sprawl, we define ourselves by what and how we drive. As Vanderbilt shows, driving is a provocatively revealing prism for examining how our minds work and the ways in which we interact with one another. Ultimately, Traffic is about more thandriving: it’s about human nature. This book will change the way we see ourselves and the world around us. And who knows? It may even make us better drivers.
Tom Vanderbilt's Trafficengagingly written, meticulously researched, endlessly interesting and informativeis one of those rare books that comes out of the depths of nowhere. Its subjects are the road and the people who drive it, which is to say Traffic gets about as close to the heart of modern existence as any book could get, yet what's truly astonishing is that no one else has done it, at least not on the scale that Vanderbilt has achieved. We've had road novels (On the Road) and road movies ("Two for the Road") and road songs ("On the Road Again"), but nonfiction studies of "why we drive the way we do and what it says about us"to borrow Vanderbilt's subtitlehave been almost entirely limited to dry, impenetrable engineering and psychological treatises…Read it and you're likely to come away a better driver, more cautious and more alert. Certainly I like to think it's made me a better driver, but then as Vanderbilt says, we all think we're better drivers than we really are.
More Reviews and RecommendationsTom Vanderbilt writes about design, technology, science, and culture for Wired, Slate, The New York Times, and many other publications. He lives in Brooklyn and drives a 2001 Volvo V40.
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November 21, 2009: This is one of those social science books that describe human behavior. why we do what we do and how it measures up worldwide and against university studies. when you think seat belt laws and safety regulations, think this book. these are the people you want making those decisions for us. for me, it was a bit too much "science" and too little "human". i'm glad people think of these things and study them, but i'm not so sure i'm glad i spent the time reading it. if you like these sorts of books, it's excellent - well written, engaging and enlightening. if you don't enjoy these books you'll be somewhat bored. makes for rating it hard. i don't like these types of books so i give it a poor rating; but if you liked this type of book it would be a 5 star rating. so in this case the rating system just isn't fair to the author! but i thought i'd share my opinion.
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August 18, 2008: Interesting!! I have asked the question 'Who ARE all these people?' and the sad-but-true answer is...me! The psychology of human nature and the supreme effort it takes to move about efficiently in the modern world are examined here. Enjoyed this one!
From the moment I heard about it, I couldn’t wait to get my hands on Tom Vanderbilt’s new book about traffic. I’m sure I wasn’t the only one. Haven’t we all pondered the mysteries of traffic endlessly (at least, it feels endless when you're stuck in it)? After all, traffic is as pervasive as the common cold, except bigger, more relevant. Even the sickliest among us comes down with colds only intermittently.
And it’s not as if traffic jams are all that intuitive. Does it really make sense that if I slow down just a teeny, tiny bit to glance, ever so fleetingly, at the site of an accident in the other direction, a traffic jam is likely to ensue in my wake? My rubbernecking was so trifling -- how could it possibly cause so much trouble? A book that explains this, and all the other seemingly insoluble questions that arise on the not-so-open road -- one that would distill all the technical research and studies and god knows what else into prose one could get through -- struck me, in the abstract, as sheer genius.
It turns out, however, that traffic is not all that interesting.
That said, Vanderbilt, a journalist, is an intelligent and wry writer, and he offers up some cocktail party-worthy nuggets of information. Who, for example, would have guessed that "late merging" is good for everyone? That is, what do you do when you see a sign that says the lane you are in will end in one mile? If you are like the old Vanderbilt, the pre-Traffic Vanderbilt, you "notice an opening in the right lane and quickly move over." All is well until, "as the lane creeps to a slow halt, you notice with rising indignation that the cars in the lane you have vacated are continuing to speed ahead, out of sight." The instinct of many people is to view those "late mergers" as "arrogant louts" who are cutting ahead in line, but it turns out they may be doing something right. This counterintuitive finding is explained to Vanderbilt this way: "The full capacity of the road is being used, rather than a bunch of people merging early and trying to create an artificial one-lane road earlier than necessary." In Pennsylvania, where traffic engineers formally adopted the late-merge concept, traffic flow improved by 15 percent, Vanderbilt writes.
One is likely to come away from Traffic with an action plan. (In that, it’s like a self-help book.) It’s not just about vowing henceforth to merge late. Expect also to be newly committed to cautious driving in general -- as well as convinced of the evil, evil, of talking on your cell phone while driving. Even the most hardened critics of the "nanny state" are likely to come away from this book ardent that something be done about such recklessness. "In 2006," Vanderbilt tells us, "a Chicago driver reaching for a cell phone while driving lost control of his SUV, killing a passenger in another car…. The driver was fined $200." That’s because the law typically treats anything except for driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs as an "accident," no matter how egregious or irresponsible the behavior that led to it.
You may be wondering: what do the dangers of talking on one’s cell phone while driving have to do with traffic? It’s a good question, since the link is somewhat tenuous. Vanderbilt’s explanation is a bit schoolmarmish: "Rather than build more lanes, the best congestion solution…is for people to get in fewer crashes -- which…would happen if drivers simply paid more attention to their driving," Vanderbilt tells us. He’s surely right, but it seems a bit sneaky, something of a bait-and-switch. Who would have been eager to read a book about how to be a safer driver?
In fact, at least a third of the book is devoted not to traffic but to the danger inherent in driving. Incidentally, that’s not as boring as it sounds, in large part because Vanderbilt has some surprising things to say -- reminders of our tendency to act irrationally (or at least in ways that confound experts). A "study in Finland…found that adding reflector posts to a curved road resulted in higher speeds and more accidents than when there were no posts," he writes. "Other studies have found that drivers tend to go faster when a curve is marked with an advisory speed limit than when it is not." As Vanderbilt spends a chapter explaining, this is largely because drivers are likely to "feel" safer with such things in place -- and hence drive more dangerously.
As it turns out, there are a lot of things related to driving that are more interesting than the hows and whys of traffic jams -- and Traffic discusses many of them, from free street parking (bad from a traffic perspective, as all the cars circling as they looking for parking jam the streets; besides, what a waste of valuable urban real estate -- lending it out to cars for no fee!) to the relationship between driving culture and political norms (the more corrupt a society, the more harrowing its streets are likely to be -- and that’s only partially because unqualified drivers pay bribes to get driver’s licenses).
But the very breadth of topics covered suggests the problem with Traffic the book, which ironically is similar to the problem with traffic the phenomenon. It is unpredictable; you never know what you will find when you go around the bend. The next section may be about ants (who commute very efficiently); or it may be about the way our driving behavior is influenced by feeling anonymous in our cars; or it may be about all the near-crashes we that we experience but barely notice, let alone learn from. There is no logical progression, no buildup to any unified theory.
Traffic is also repetitive. By book’s end, Vanderbilt sounds a little bit like the hectoring driver’s ed instructor -- the one who makes it sound as if every time you drive to the market, you have a 50 percent chance of dying. (In fact, Vanderbilt tells us that over 50 years of driving, you have a 1-in-100 chance of dying in a car crash.) But how many times can we be told that we are irrational and drive recklessly?
As for the rubbernecking phenomenon that I was so eager to get to the bottom of, it turns out there’s not much to say. Vanderbilt dispatches with it in a single paragraph, writing "that when each driver slows to look at an accident for ten seconds, it does not seem egregious because they have already waited ten minutes. But that ten minutes arose from everybody else’s ten seconds."
Somehow I expected the explanation to be more satisfying. But the fault is surely mine. It’s just traffic, after all. --Adelle Waldman
Adelle Waldman has written for The New York Times Book Review, Slate, and The Village Voice. She is working on a novel.
Would you be surprised that road rage can be good for society? Or that most crashes happen on sunny, dry days? That our minds can trick us into thinking the next lane is moving faster? Or that you can gauge a nation’s driving behavior by its levels of corruption? These are only a few of the remarkable dynamics that Tom Vanderbilt explores in this fascinating tour through the mysteries of the road.
Based on exhaustive research and interviews with driving experts and traffic officials around the globe, Traffic gets under the hood of the everyday activity of driving to uncover the surprisingly complex web of physical, psychological, and technical factors that explain how traffic works, why we drive the way we do, and what our driving says about us. Vanderbilt examines the perceptual limits and cognitive underpinnings that make us worse drivers than we think we are. He demonstrates why plans to protect pedestrians from cars often lead to more accidents. He shows how roundabouts, which can feel dangerous and chaotic, actually make roads safer—and reduce traffic in the bargain. He uncovers who is more likely to honk at whom, and why. He explains why traffic jams form, outlines the unintended consequences of our quest for safety, and even identifies the most common mistake drivers make in parking lots.
The car has long been a central part of American life; whether we see it as a symbol of freedom or a symptom of sprawl, we define ourselves by what and how we drive. As Vanderbilt shows, driving is a provocatively revealing prism for examining how our minds work and the ways in which we interact with one another. Ultimately, Traffic is about more thandriving: it’s about human nature. This book will change the way we see ourselves and the world around us. And who knows? It may even make us better drivers.
Tom Vanderbilt's Trafficengagingly written, meticulously researched, endlessly interesting and informativeis one of those rare books that comes out of the depths of nowhere. Its subjects are the road and the people who drive it, which is to say Traffic gets about as close to the heart of modern existence as any book could get, yet what's truly astonishing is that no one else has done it, at least not on the scale that Vanderbilt has achieved. We've had road novels (On the Road) and road movies ("Two for the Road") and road songs ("On the Road Again"), but nonfiction studies of "why we drive the way we do and what it says about us"to borrow Vanderbilt's subtitlehave been almost entirely limited to dry, impenetrable engineering and psychological treatises…Read it and you're likely to come away a better driver, more cautious and more alert. Certainly I like to think it's made me a better driver, but then as Vanderbilt says, we all think we're better drivers than we really are.
Traffic jams are not, by and large, caused by flaws in road design but by flaws in human nature. While this is bad news for driversthere's not much to be done about human natureit is good news for readers of Tom Vanderbilt's new book. Traffic is not a dry examination of highway engineering; it's a surprising, enlightening look at the psychology of human beings behind the steering wheels…My solution to the nation's vehicular woes would be to make this good book required reading for anyone applying for a driver's license. Though you could then be sure that some percentage of car crashes in America would be caused by people trying to skim Traffic while stuck in a bottleneck on their way to the D.M.V.
Vanderbilt looks at the psychology of driving and the many false impressions drivers use to operate their vehicles. He also looks at other subjects potentially unconsidered by the average driver, such as traffic control centers and smart technology that improves driving decisions. David Slavin's diverse application of tone and personality make him a great choice for this production. Vanderbilt's writing is accessible, but it changes in tone depending on the context (ranging from life-and-death issues of accidents to reflecting about traffic controllers protesting during the Academy Awards). Slavin balances these shifting thoughts and maintains an overall energetic personality throughout the production. The big challenge of this audiobook is how much drivers who listen to audiobooks will adjust their habits while listening to it. A Knopf hardcover. (Reviews, May 19).
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Everyone gets stuck in traffic at some point, and here freelance journalist Vanderbilt (Survival City: Adventures Among the Ruins of Atomic America) provides a fascinating look at the whys and hows of the traffic we confront on a daily basis. Deeply researched and rich in facts, his sociological study of driving habits and traffic patterns could not come at a better time. Rising fuel costs, deferred road maintenance and construction, increasing populations, and growing congestion mean that traffic is not going to get better. Among the findings here are that traffic increases by one third when parents ferry kids to school; most car crashes happen on clear, sunny days; men honk more than women; and highways can handle more cars at 55 mph than at 80 mph. In researching the book, Vanderbilt consulted government documents, behavioral journals, census and demographic data, engineering studies, and local, state, and federal transportation reports. He even provides a comparative study of traffic in other countries. Anyone who drives will not be surprised overall but may be shocked at some of the analysis that is presented here for the first time-and may become a safer driver because of it. Even pedestrians are affected by traffic and should read this book. Recommended for all libraries. [See Prepub Alert, LJ4/1/08.]
Traffic emerges from chaos, and chaos emerges from traffic. There's too much of both, and entirely too little honesty-a quality that has much to do with travail on the roads. Say what? Well, writes I.D. and Print editor Vanderbilt (Survival City: Adventures Among the Ruins of Atomic America, 2002), the nations of the world that are the least corrupt "are also the safest places in the world to drive," such that Sweden "practically oozes safety." France, once a place of much roadside carnage, got safer once it installed speed cameras and started doing Breathalyzer tests, while New Zealand has eminently safe roads. Americans aren't quite so lucky, on either the corruption or the traffic-safety front, but at least we beat out Russia, which accounts for some two-thirds of all road deaths in Europe, and China, a veritable slaughterhouse. Vanderbilt's book is a trove of such information, but also a fine study in what works and what does not. What does not work, for instance, is speeding along the interstate, weaving in and out of traffic, and popping a cork when a slow vehicle gets in the way. As he notes, in experiments along the New Jersey Turnpike, that great bane of drivers, the weaving, honking speedster arrives at his (almost always his) destination only a few minutes ahead of the driver who maintains an even rate of speed and stays in one lane. What does work, as their designers intended, are on-ramp meters: Having sussed out "the basic parameters of how highways perform" and determined that the key factor is volume, those designers put in place a metering system that in some places has doubled highway productivity. And why are highways mowed ten-odd yards on either side? Because mostcars come to rest within that zone once they've flown off the road-though, one General Motors experiment indicates, a "crash-proof" highway would have 100-foot clear zones, which would be particularly useful come the evening rush hour, which is twice as deadly as the morning one. Fluently written and oddly entertaining, full of points to ponder while stuck at the on-ramp meter or an endless red light. Agent: Zoe Pagnamenta/PFD New York. First printing of 150,000
Loading...Prologue: Why I Became a Late Merger (and Why You Should Too)
Ch. 1 Why Does the Other Lane Always Seem Faster? How Traffic Messes with Our Heads
Ch. 2 Why You're Not as Good a Driver as You Think You Are
Ch. 3 How Our Eyes and Minds Betray Us on the Road
Ch. 4 Why Ants Don't Get into Traffic Jams (and Humans Do): On Cooperation as a Cure for Congestion
Ch. 5 Why Women Cause More Congestion Than Men (and Other Secrets of Traffic)
Ch. 6 Why More Roads Lead to More Traffic (and What to Do About It)
Ch. 7 When Dangerous Roads Are Safer
Ch. 8 How Traffic Explains the World: On Driving with a Local Accent
Ch. 9 Why You Shouldn't Drive with a Beer-Drinking Divorced Doctor Named Fred on Super Bowl Sunday in a Pickup Truck in Rural Montana: What's Risky on the Road and Why
Epilogue: Driving Lessons
Acknowledgments
Notes
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