|
|
Are people genetically predisposed to be bad drivers? Those are the findings of a recent study in the journal Cerebral Cortex, which is ... what they have learned about a task or situation after being away from it.
In the study, 29 drivers spent 15 laps on a simulated course with complicated curves and ... way to quickly test for the gene variant.
Blame Genetics for Bad Driving, Study Finds (CNN)
|
|
When Bad Drivers Amongst Us Try To Park and Fail
A new YouTube hit, this video shows how some horrible drivers not only show their lack of skills but also how much they could care a less about you and me. The 63 year old woman driving the BMW not only violated the poor cars but broke the law by fleeing. Thank goodness the police ended up ...
|
|
No need to curse that bad driver weaving in and out of the lane in front of you—he cannot help it, U.S. researchers reported on Wednesday.
They found that people with a particular gene ... worse on a driving test than people with a different DNA sequence.
The study may explain why there are so many bad drivers out there—about 30 percent of Americans have the variant, the team at the University ...
|
|
... south upon my return to home. I bike back home from Jake's place, and I meet a bad driver just blocks from the apartment. Meh…. I'm ok, and the bike is too.
What happened ... some point, bicycle questions will show up on driver's license tests. I don't know if they do currently, but too many drivers act like they don't have to pay attention to bikes while on the road.
|
|
What goes around comes around.
It seems that when male drivers act like complete gimps, it’s not their fault - it’s a matter of poor breeding. According to Tom Vanderbilt’s reporting, it’s something to do with relative testosterone & estrogen levels that they experienced in the womb . Those with longer ring fingers than index
|
|
... is stimulated when doing a task than in those with a normal BDNF gene. People with the variant also don't recover as well after a stroke. The gene variant isn't always bad, though. Studies have found that people with it maintain their usual mental sharpness longer than those without it when neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson's, Huntington's and multiple sclerosis are ...
|
|
Related Tags
|