MasterTorque
  • Home
  • MasterTips
  • MasterTest
  • MasterNews
  • MasterHumour
  • Advertise
April 16, 2026 by Samantha Greathead

Why knowing the danger is not enough

Why knowing the danger is not enough
April 16, 2026 by Samantha Greathead

April is Distracted Driving Awareness Month — yet for many drivers, awareness alone is not enough to stop the behaviour. Most South Africans know that using a mobile phone behind the wheel is dangerous. Yet, 60% still admit to doing it. This month, we need to ask why knowledge is failing to change behaviour?

 

Overconfidence

The answer may lie in a psychological phenomenon known as optimism bias: the deeply human tendency to believe that bad outcomes happen to other people, not to us. The CEO of MasterDrive, Eugene Herbert, says: “Research consistently shows while most drivers acknowledge driving while distracted (DWD) is dangerous, the majority believe they are personally above-average drivers who can handle it.

 

“Multiple studies are also showing that a portion of the motorists who drive whilst distracted, also consider themselves safe while using their phones at the wheel. The challenge with this is that the more confident a driver feels, the less likely they are to take the risk seriously.”

 

This mindset is a persistent obstacle to road safety. “There are drivers who can tell you every statistic about DWD and then pick up their phone at the next intersection. The belief that ‘I am different’ or ‘I can manage it’ is not logic. It is bias which is costing lives,” says Herbert.

 

When the brain lies to you

Compounding overconfidence is the neurological reality of distraction itself. “When a driver glances at a message, their brain does not flag the moment as dangerous because it does not perceive what it is missing. Near-misses go unregistered.

 

“Consequently, hazards that were avoided by luck – because driving takes 100% of your attention – are processed as proof of competence. The brain ultimately rewards DWD with false reassurance with every safe arrival — reinforcing the risky behaviour.”

 

“It is proven that a five-second glance at a phone while driving at 120 km/h, is equivalent to travelling the length of a rugby field completely blind. Drivers do not feel blind, but in control. That creates a dangerous gap between perception and reality.”

 

Overconfidence is further entrenched by social normalisation. “When drivers observe others around them texting at traffic lights or on a phone on the highway without immediate consequence, this diminishes perceived risk. Research following the pandemic, also found that drivers carried increased digital multitasking into their vehicles making DWD even more socially acceptable.”

 

Changing DWD requires more than awareness campaigns. “It requires confronting the psychology directly. Organisations play a critical role by implementing policies and technology to prevent it. This Distracted Driving Awareness Month, move beyond statistics. The most dangerous driver is not the one who does not know the risk, it is the one who does, and believes it does not apply to them,” says Herbert.

 

Read more MasterTips

 

Previous articleWeekday Witkid jokesNext article Jetour T-series goes PHEV

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

About MASTERTORQUE

Over 15 years ago, MasterDrive released their first newsletter. The newsletter grew at a phenomenal rate and evolved into it its own publication: MasterTorque. At the start of 2017,
MasterTorque launched as the best source of road safety, motoring, news and, of course, a bit of humour for all of those interested in and connected to the motoring and transport industry. The newsletter remains an important part of the online publication still being released every week of the year to an audience of well over 15 000.

Newsletter Signup

Loading

Recent Posts

Weekday WitMay 14, 2026
AFP opens the floorMay 14, 2026
Carjackings are not going anywhereMay 14, 2026

Categories

  • MasterHumour
  • MasterNews
  • MasterTest
  • MasterTips
  • MasterTravel
  • Uncategorized

Tags

best jokes blonde jokes BMW clean jokes coronavirus covid-19 current jokes defensive driving distracted driving driver safety driving tips eugene herbert fleet managers fleet safety fleet safety awards friday funnies funny funny jokes humour jokes latest jokes laugh laughing launch luxury masterdrive masternews mastertips motorbike new jokes review road regulation road rules road safety safe driving safety technology safety tips samantha greathead south africa suv suzuki test test drive weekday wit wife jokes

MASTERTORQUE

Over 15 years ago, MasterDrive released their first newsletter. The newsletter grew at a phenomenal rate and evolved into it its own publication: MasterTorque. At the start of 2017,
MasterTorque launched as the best source of road safety, motoring, news and, of course, a bit of humour for all of those interested in and connected to the motoring and transport industry. The newsletter remains an important part of the online publication still being released every week of the year to an audience of well over 15 000.

Contact

25 Yarmouth Road,
Mulbarton,
Johannesburg South
086 110 0618
Mon. - Fri. 8AM - 6PM

Recent Posts

Weekday WitMay 14, 2026
AFP opens the floorMay 14, 2026
Carjackings are not going anywhereMay 14, 2026
Proudly Built by TraversonsGroup