We study a model of traffic where drivers adopt different behavioral
strategies. These can be cooperative or defective according to a driver abiding
or not by a traffic rule. Drivers can change their strategy by imitating the
majority, with a rule that depends on the strategies with which they have
interacted. These interactions occur at intersections, where vehicles pay a
temporal cost according to their strategy. We analyze the conditions under
which different strategy compositions represent an advantage in the system
velocity. We found that the cooperators' mean speed is higher than the
defectors' even when the vehicle density is large. However, defectors can
obtain benefits in their mean speed when they are a minority in an essentially
cooperative population. The presence of a core of educated drivers, who persist
firmly in a cooperative behavior, optimizes the speed in the system, especially
for intermediate values of vehicular density and higher temporal costs