Hidden Brain - Episode 29: Traffic

Episode Date: May 3, 2016

Traffic. You hate it, we hate it, the rest of the world hates it, and unfortunately, our best efforts to curb it usually only make it worse. This week on Hidden Brain, we visit a few of the world's mo...st congested cities, and investigate a few options to make driving safer and less maddening.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. If you live or work in a city, sitting in traffic is probably a big part of your life. It's about 15 to 20 to 30 out in the inbound side. We had about 20 minutes of life. Here in Washington, DC, we take perverse pride in having some of the worst traffic in the United States. But on a global scale, DC has nothing on London, or Istanbul, Rio, or Mexico City. On today's episode, we're going to explore all kinds of interventions that can make traffic better. We're also going to look at the interventions that are supposed to make traffic better, but don't. I feel like we should put together the international journal of unintended consequences
Starting point is 00:00:49 and send them to lawmakers all over the planet. Before we get there, we want to take you on a quick trip around some of the world's most congested cities. Producer Maggie Penman reached out to NPR correspondent station in Asia, Africa, and Europe. She's also going to tell us about a little traffic culture clash of her own. So a few years ago, I'm out in LA for a couple of days for work. I'm driving a rented car, and I come up to a busy intersection. And I'm trying to turn left. I have my blinker on.
Starting point is 00:01:19 I'm in the left-hand turn lane, and the light is green. But there are still tons of cars coming through the intersection, so I patiently sit there waiting my turn and the light turns yellow and there's still cars coming through the intersection and then the light turns red. I think, okay, I'll just wait until the light turns green again. Big mistake. The cars behind me start honking like crazy. I can see the guy in my rearview mirror and he's losing it, yelling, hitting his steering wheel and frustration. When the light does turn green again, I'm now determined to make this left turn. And the guy behind me turns too and then passes me immediately, yelling out his window
Starting point is 00:01:56 and flipping the off. At the next intersection, the woman who was behind him pulls up next to me and signals for me to roll my window down, and she's this kind looking lady probably about my mother's age, and I thought she was going to commiserate with me about how crazy that guy was. But no, then she starts yelling at me too. Why didn't you go? Were you texting? What's wrong with you? So I get to the MPR West office, and I'm very shaken up, and I describe this experience to a couple of my colleagues who live in work in LA and they're both like, oh yeah, you probably should have gone.
Starting point is 00:02:32 So we confirmed for you that you are indeed crazy, at least in LA you are. That's Arzurezvani, an editor at Morning Edition who works out of MPR's LA Bureau. She was one of the people I was meeting that day and I recently called her up to try and get some insight about why my style of driving was so frustrating to L.A. drivers. You have to kind of float in the middle of an intersection when you want to make a left or right turn. You got to wait for the cars, uncommon traffic to you know finish up and sometimes that means making that turn on a red. So wait, I was supposed to run the red light? By the book, that's illegal, right? But there's just a new normal that is introduced in cities like Los Angeles, and you just
Starting point is 00:03:14 kind of got to go with the flow. I was really curious about this new normal that Arzu was talking about, and I wondered whether other cities had unspoken rules or conventions too. When you come to a light and it turns green, the automatic thing to do if you want to take a left turn is to immediately rush and take a left across three or four lanes of traffic. The first person I thought to ask was Frank Langfit, who in addition to being Emperor's correspondent based in Shanghai, has also occasionally driven a taxi around the city to find stories. It's like being in a game where anything can come at you at any time from any angle. So a stop sign, a light, is not entirely relevant but not very relevant.
Starting point is 00:03:55 So when I go through intersections, I look right, I look left, I look right again. The norm in Shanghai is that traffic laws are more like suggestions. Here in Shanghai, there is not a lot of enforcement and I'm amazed when I get a ticket. I was pulled over a while ago for being in the wrong turn lane, which was just kind of comical, considering all the things that the cops allow people to do here. But considering all of this, I was shocked when Frank told me about another norm. There's almost no road rage. As long as the car is never touch, people just let it go.
Starting point is 00:04:31 And I think it's maybe it's partly a function. I don't understand all of this even though I've been here a long time. It may be a function if this is such a crowded country, especially these big cities on these coast, that if you were going to get angry about this stuff, you'd just have a heart attack. In fact, he said, I'm the only one who has road rage. I'm like, I'm like, I'm like the only guy in the city who has road rage.
Starting point is 00:04:50 I also talked to MPR's correspondent in Nairobi, Greg Warner, and he told me Nairobi is one of the most polite cities he's ever lived in. For instance, nobody cuts in line. But when it comes to driving, Greg says, all that changes. One of the main features of driving in Nairobi, according to Greg, is that there are very few traffic lights. There are occasionally, like a random traffic light you'll see, but nobody actually pays
Starting point is 00:05:14 attention to it. It has no actual meaning. It just turns green and red and there are no particular reasons. So how do people know when to go? It's all convention. And so in this situation, what I would think people would do is a kind of honor system. Like, okay, yeah, you went, okay, now let me go.
Starting point is 00:05:36 That lane hasn't gone for a while. Like, it's just a kind of understanding, but it's actually just a complete free for all. Everybody's trying to go at once. And every foreland intersection is like a gridlock. And it's not just a gridlock where you know, some cars will kind of inch forward. But it's like a twisted knot where I'm behind your bumper and they're behind their bumper. And it's like this interlocked, you know, kind of origami
Starting point is 00:06:05 or whatever. I also talked to Rich Preston, NPR's producer in London. And the primary feature of driving in the UK is of course that you drive on the left. And as the London producer dealing with visiting American correspondence, I see this a lot, is visitors to the United Kingdom stepping out into the road, not looking down the road the right way. Rich travels around for work and is pretty custom to switching sides and driving on the right, but occasionally that rule of thumb gets him into trouble.
Starting point is 00:06:34 There's that mentality of, oh I mean another country I'm going to have to drive on the right hand side, that I started driving on the right hand side of the road in Ireland, even though it should have been sticking on the left. And even when he's back home in London, Rich says driving can be pretty scary. Because the thing about London is it's such an old city, it's really hard to make more space for all the people that are here. Rich mostly cycles around the city these days, but he can still be found honking at drivers. I actually bought a horn for my bike, which is this small thing that clips onto the handlebars and it's an kind of electronic horn and it's about 140 decibels and it saved my life
Starting point is 00:07:11 on so many occasions I can guarantee you. I asked Rich to collect some sound of his commute home yesterday so I'm going to leave you on this somewhat shrill note. Watch, real note. Whee! Whee! Whee! Whee! Whee! Alright, hope you made it home safely.
Starting point is 00:07:29 That's Hidden Brain Producer Maggie Penman. After a short break, Dan Pink is going to be back on the show to play around a stopwatch science with me. We're going to tell you about interesting social science research on what works and doesn't work to fix traffic congestion. They found even controlling for population growth that constructing additional roads led to more traffic congestion, not less.
Starting point is 00:07:51 Stay with us. Stay with us. Stay with us. Back now for another round of stop-watch science. I'm Shankar Vidantum. I'm joined as always by Daniel Pink, our senior stopwatch science correspondent. Welcome, Dad. Thank you, Shankar.
Starting point is 00:08:09 On stopwatch science, Dan and I give one another 60 seconds to summarize interesting social science research. As we approach the 60 second mark, our producers will drown us out with music just like they do at the Oscars. Our topic today is traffic. You hate it, you deal with it, maybe you are even in it right now. Today we're going to explore what works and what doesn't work in easy congestion and improving traffic safety.
Starting point is 00:08:33 Dan, if you're ready, your first 60 seconds starts now. Well, there's one easy, if expensive solution, and that's just to build more roads, right? Makes sense. Well, maybe not. Two economists writing in the American Economic Review analyzed two decades worth of data on US commuting times and road construction. They found even controlling for population growth that constructing additional roads led to more traffic congestion, not less.
Starting point is 00:08:57 Now what's going on here? Even though this paper is a complex bear of statistical analysis, the core explanation is simple. Supply and demand. When we build roads, we increase the supply of driving opportunities, increasing the supply of something generally reduces its price. But driving it turns out is extremely responsive to price changes. The lower price, that is more room on the roads, increases demand again.
Starting point is 00:09:26 More individuals and commercial truckers now want to drive and they recongest the roads. Economists call it the fundamental law of highway congestion. More roads cause more traffic. Unfortunately policy makers ignore the law and the result is futility. So I'm guessing the solution to this is more public transit you would think but what the research also shows is that adding public transportation also increases congestion for the exact same reason it lowers the price of driving driving response to price changes more people then get on the roads so more public transit doesn't help more roads don't help we just have to resign ourselves a traffic jams well what we have to do is i think we have
Starting point is 00:10:07 to start thinking like economists and realize how much driving depends on price and so the best thing to do is something that is deeply politically in popular which is to raise the price of driving perhaps through congestion charges or higher tolls i think that being just a quick president and i suspect he's not going to win no i don't think so. But maybe you can win, Shankar, on your next 60 seconds, which begins right now. All right. When you enact laws or make policies that affect human beings, it's often easy to forget
Starting point is 00:10:36 that you're dealing with a dynamic system, which is exactly what you were just talking about, Dan. People adapt to new rules often in ways that policymakers don't anticipate. In the late 1980s, Mexico City was dealing with a pollution problem. Lawmaker said, let's pass a new law. They banned drivers from the road one day each week. The day you were not allowed to drive was calculated based on the last digits of your car license plate number. Boom, once in a whole law, 20% fewer cars in the road each day, right?
Starting point is 00:11:05 What could go wrong? Exactly. Lucas Davis at the University of Michigan finds that pollution did not decline as a result of the measure in Mexico City. Why drivers went out and bought more cars? If I can't drive my Toyota on Mondays, I'm going to drive my Chevy instead. Even worse, the law triggered an increase in older, more polluting cars, perhaps because buying a new car is expensive, so drivers bought an old gas gas-linked clunker to drive the one day of the week they could not use their regular car. I feel that lawmakers around the world should be asked to sign the Hippocratic Oath Dan. First, do, no, hard.
Starting point is 00:11:44 Exactly, right. I feel like we should put together the international journal of unintended consequences and send them to law makers all over the planet indeed that's what this is indeed now hoping that the consequences of the next sixty seconds are predictable then your time starts now we all know traffic exhaust and air pollution are harmful but what about traffic noise is it a health hazard or just an annoyance? A team of British researchers looked at data on 8.6 million people in neighborhoods across London.
Starting point is 00:12:12 Then they analyzed their exposure to daytime and nighttime traffic noise and compared that to a range of health data. What they found even after controlling for race, sex, air pollution levels, socioeconomic status, and other factors was sobering. Adults exposed to long-term daytime road traffic noise had lower life expectancies and were more likely to be admitted to the hospital for strokes than people living in quieter areas. This was especially true for elderly residents.
Starting point is 00:12:41 Now the researchers found only a correlation and the effect wasn't huge. But other evidence has shown that constantly being around loud traffic triggers stress hormones, which are linked to hypertension and occasionally death. Bottom line, that racket you hear in certain areas of big cities, honking, idling, revving, may be harming people who aren't even in the cars. So interesting, Dan, is it possible that this is being driven just by the fact that you
Starting point is 00:13:08 have more noise pollution in urban areas, and they may be other factors in urban areas that increase the mortality rate? Well, possibly, but they actually did a good job of controlling for a lot of that. They divided up the city into census tracks and actually compared census tracks to each other, and the census tracks that had more noise had worse health outcomes. Again, even after you control for the things we know drive health outcomes, especially socioeconomic status. So there was something about noise that seemed to be producing these ill effects.
Starting point is 00:13:37 So let me turn it over to you for your 60 seconds, but I'd like you in light of the study to do it very quietly. All right, so we've heard that noise can be bad for you, but can making noise also save your life. James Habir Imana and William Jack at Georgetown University analyzed two interventions in Kenya to improve traffic safety. The government passed a set of laws to limit unsafe driving among many bus drivers. These are vans that hold
Starting point is 00:14:05 a dozen passengers. They are private versions of public transit. The laws turned out to have very little effect on road safety. What worked was a second initiative where passengers on the minibuses were encouraged to quote, heckle and chide drivers for unsafe driving. Stickers on the buses said, don't just sit there, stand up, speak up. When consumers were encouraged to make some noise, driver behavior improved radically, and many bus crashes dropped by at least 50%. Now, we don't know what exactly drove this.
Starting point is 00:14:36 Maybe people spoke up, maybe the driver was afraid people would speak up, whatever it was, it worked. That is extraordinary. And I also think that we should rename the show Heckle and Chide. You can be Heckle, I can be Chide. whatever it was, it worked. That is extraordinary. I also think that we should rename the show Heckle and Chide. You can be Heckle, I can be Chide. I actually think a lot of this shows power to the people. Can I be Dr Heckle and Mr Chide?
Starting point is 00:14:55 Certainly. There you have it. Building new roads can lead to more congestion and banning people from driving can increase pollution. Traffic noise is not just unpleasant. It can have health consequences. lead to more congestion and banning people from driving can increase pollution. Traffic noise is not just unpleasant, it can have health consequences. Finally, before you pass a new law to solve a problem, try to empower the people with the problem to fix it themselves. Dan, thanks for joining me on Stappwadson.
Starting point is 00:15:18 My pleasure, I have to get back in my car now. The Hidden Brain podcast is produced by Cara McGurk-Kallison, Maggie Pennman and Max Nestrak. You can find us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and listen to my stories on your local public radio station. If you like this episode, please leave us a review on iTunes. It'll help other people find the podcast. I'm Shankar Veddhathan and this is NPR. I'm Shankar Vedantan and this is NPR.

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