mikemill
Contributor
That can be true, but it's a classic example of risk compensation at work. The driver who stays under the speed limit perceives his risk to be lower, and compensates by being less alert. The speeder is more aware of his risk, and thus pays more attention. Both are adjusting their behavior to maximize benefit while keeping risk within their tolerance.
Of course there are people like me who drive the same, relatively straight, section of road every day to the point where even doing 15 over the brain still shuts down the higher thought processes because it is just bored
