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Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 10:17 am
by mcbcatherine
Hi,
My name is Catherine and I'm currently looking for people to participate in my research project. This project is part of my Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in Psychology degree at Deakin University.
The project follows up a study conducted in 2008, which found that people high in psychological need for control (people who like a lot of control over their lives - if you like, ‘control freaks’!) were generally safer riders. However, we unexpectedly also found that these riders reported more performance of stunts (wheelies and wheel spins).
This study therefore aims to further explore the relationship between safety and stunting. Are those high in need for control seeking to test the limits of themselves and their bikes? Can stunting help you become a safer rider?
We are therefore looking for licenced on-road motorcycle riders, who have ridden within the last 24 months, to complete the confidential questionnaire that makes up this project.
If you're interested in participating, or just want to find out more, then please follow the link below:
http://www.deakin.edu.au/psychology/res ... clingstudy
Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 11:55 am
by tim
What's a stunt?
I hear MrWasabi is into them now

Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 12:02 pm
by DMonkey
I think a stunt when you do fully sick tricks like standing up on my pegs while riding... or if i take 1 hand off the handle bars?
Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 12:35 pm
by MrWasabi
tim wrote:What's a stunt?
I hear MrWasabi is into them now

Ill show you how to correctly shit your pants

Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 1:23 pm
by Smitty
....done
bit annoying the site is a bit slow reacting to ones selections
Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 2:43 pm
by Lone Wolf
Done
Agree with above, very slow
Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 4:09 pm
by Stereo
42. Wear a leather one-piece suit. (I wonder if a 2piece ziptogether counts?.... I said no)
Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 4:11 pm
by Stereo
56. Intentionally do a donut. (I would if tires were free! but I dont, because they are expensive)
Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 4:16 pm
by Stereo
1. I can see how it would be interesting to marry someone from a foreign country. ............. Now we are getting to the important questions... lol
15. I often like to have the radio or TV on while I'm doing something else, such as reading or cleaning up. (hmmm a conundrum... When I am reading I like silence... when I am cleaning I like very lound music)
Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 4:20 pm
by Stereo
Done...
Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 5:12 pm
by smithy5
Done...
I like to turn the TV or Radio on when I want to go to sleep

I can't sleep if it's too quiet.
Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 5:42 pm
by Damon Z1000
I haven't looked yet and don't think I'm going to. If I wasn't warey enough I would pin this as a goverment survey

First post

Chick
Or is it a site piss take
I'm gona give it a miss I think.
Good luck the rest of ya

Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 9:59 pm
by Ratmick
Done, it looked pretty harmless to me although it did have more than a sniff of Myer-Briggs about it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myer_Briggs if you're interested. They normally pop-up during team-building exercises and are a bit of an eye-opener.
I've done a few of these over the years and they are pretty interesting. Funny enough they've all been roughly the same outcome.
You would have thought that you would change/mellow as you get older, but your basic behaviour doesn't. Maybe I was just born old...my mum thinks so.
In essence:
1. My personality group doesn't like, do or condone overt risk-taking behaviour. This makes us safe and a good insurance risk but we're probably as boring as monkey shit.
2. We tend to over-analyse things. This drives some people of the other groups nuts as it can take us a while to make important decisions. The other side of it is that our choice of solution for the important decision is normally the right choice

.
3. We don't generally make good sales people or customer liason staff, but we make a bloody good engineers, accountants, programmers or analysts (just as well given my job).
4. Loud and extremely outgoing people that make good salesman tend to irritate the shit out of us (if we let them). Funny enough my personality type would tend to shit them to tears as well. However when you have a few years under your belt
both groups come to appreciate the traits of the other group, you find common ground and you make a good team.
As I said, interesting stuff. The actual Myer-Briggs tests I have done are really long. When I joined the NAB I had to do about six or seven tests, the Myer-Briggs type were a couple of them. At the end of the four to five hours you are completely and utterly shagged and
THEN you have to chat to a psychologist. They employed me anyway

.
Mick

Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 10:09 pm
by Saki
i do wheelstands on my 500hp turbo ZX10 in my sleep, i can also jump off my bike and land on my feet and the bike will stop and do a few flips then land on the side stand!
Risky i know, but its a risk i am whilling to take
Re: Testing the Limits of Yourself & Your Bike Survey
Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 10:24 pm
by Ratmick
Saki wrote:i do wheelstands on my 500hp turbo ZX10 in my sleep, i can also jump off my bike and land on my feet and the bike will stop and do a few flips then land on the side stand!
Risky i know, but its a risk i am whilling to take
I don't like or condone your overt risk-taking behaviour but I respect you right as an individual to participate in whatever behaviour as you see fit...
...as long as it's not my bike.
Mick
