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Description

The provided excerpts are from Tom Vanderbilt's book, "Traffic: Why We Drive the Way We Do (And What It Says About Us)," which examines the complex psychological and sociological aspects of human behavior in traffic. The text explores various topics, including the controversy over merging strategies, the unconscious cognitive processes involved in driving an "overlearned" activity, and how human bias and culture influence interactions on the road, such as aggressive driving and honking habits. Furthermore, the material discusses traffic solutions and paradoxes, ranging from congestion pricing and the counterintuitive safety of dangerous-looking roads to the challenges engineers face in developing automated systems, and it highlights how societal issues like gender roles and corruption impact traffic safety globally.