Experts In The News
In some probably not terribly surprising news, it turns out expensive car owners may not always be the kindest, most empathetic of drivers.
![Portrait photo of Courtney Coughenour](/sites/default/files/styles/60_width/public/experts/highres/D70392_188.jpg?itok=Q4lINwFv)
Drivers who don’t want to be considered a jerk on the road may want to think twice before purchasing an expensive car, according to new research.
![Portrait photo of Courtney Coughenour](/sites/default/files/styles/60_width/public/experts/highres/D70392_188.jpg?itok=Q4lINwFv)
As people around the United States were checking who won the Nevada caucus this weekend, many were faced with a different question: How exactly do you pronounce Nevada?
![Michael Green Headshot Michael Green Headshot](/sites/default/files/styles/60_width/public/experts/highres/dl_D69846_134.jpg?itok=lbOF8lRM)
The nicer the car, the ruder the driver?
![Portrait photo of Courtney Coughenour](/sites/default/files/styles/60_width/public/experts/highres/D70392_188.jpg?itok=Q4lINwFv)
If the cars you see in your rearview mirror tailgating you always seem to be flashy models, it is not coincidence. Owners of more expensive vehicles really are less considerate drivers, a study has found.
![Portrait photo of Courtney Coughenour](/sites/default/files/styles/60_width/public/experts/highres/D70392_188.jpg?itok=Q4lINwFv)
![Daily Mail](/sites/default/files/styles/100_width_25_height/public/news_source/logo/daily-mail2.png?itok=CiQoiMRh)
People driving expensive cars are more dangerous to pedestrians, and the more valuable their vehicles are the less likely they are to stop at zebra crossings.
![Portrait photo of Courtney Coughenour](/sites/default/files/styles/60_width/public/experts/highres/D70392_188.jpg?itok=Q4lINwFv)
![Las Vegas Sun](/sites/default/files/styles/100_width_25_height/public/news_source/logo/las-vegas-sun.png?itok=zYEkDFQm)
The big winners of last week’s Nevada caucuses were Sen. Bernie Sanders, Latino and younger voters, and Las Vegas. The biggest losers, besides the candidates not finishing with delegates, were caucuses as a voting system and centrist-Democratic political pundits.
![Las Vegas Sun](/sites/default/files/styles/100_width_25_height/public/news_source/logo/las-vegas-sun.png?itok=zYEkDFQm)
The big winners of last week’s Nevada caucuses were Sen. Bernie Sanders, Latino and younger voters, and Las Vegas. The biggest losers, besides the candidates not finishing with delegates, were caucuses as a voting system and centrist-Democratic political pundits.