Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Trivia: in traffic people feel stress seven times more than women

Gender equality can not be traced to some inside the passenger compartment of a car: a question of stress, emotions, thoughts. A survey commissioned by TomTom reveals that people feel stress to an extent far greater than women, despite a state of apparent calm that masks the feeling of "fight or flight".

When I'm stuck in traffic people see increase its voltage level up to 60%, while women stop 8 .7% and are more prone to distraction by singing or listening to the radio. In reaching these conclusions, the study's authors looked at certain chemicals in the saliva and submitted the results to psychologists.

Surprising results: 67% of women and 50% of men do not feel a sense of stress or discomfort even after 20 minutes spent in city traffic, even if the boys felt a sense of fight or flight that takes them to suffer as "beasts in a cage" or the situation is addressed, or you must leave. The study then provides rather interesting numbers.

77% of British motorists stuck in traffic when it hears music, singing 23%, 16% talking on the phone, eat or drink 20% and 3% for shaving or make-up.

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