|
Maneuvering
through traffic while talking on the phone
increases the likelihood of an accident
five-fold and is actually more dangerous than
driving drunk, U.S. researchers report.
That finding held true whether
the driver was holding a cell phone or using a
hands-free device, the researchers noted.
"As a society, we have
agreed on not tolerating the risk associated
with drunk driving," said researcher Frank
Drews, an assistant professor of psychology at
the University of Utah. "This study shows us
that somebody who is conversing on a cell
phone is exposing him or herself and others to
a similar risk -- cell phones actually are a
higher risk," he said.
His team's report appears in
the summer issue of the journal Human
Factors.
In the study, 40 people
followed a pace car along a prescribed course,
using a driving simulator. Some people drove
while talking on a cell phone, others
navigated while drunk (meaning their
blood-alcohol limit matched the legal limit of
0.08 percent), and others drove with no such
distractions or impairments.
"We found an increased
accident rate when people were conversing on
the cell phone," Drews said. Drivers on cell
phones were 5.36 times more likely to get in
an accident than non-distracted drivers, the
researchers found.
The phone users fared even
worse than the inebriated, the Utah team
found. There were three accidents among those
talking on cell phones -- all of them
involving a rear-ending of the pace car. In
contrast, there were no accidents recorded
among participants who were drunk, or the
sober, cell-phone-free group.
The bottom line: Cell-phone
use was linked to "a significant increase in
the accident rate," Drews said.
He said there was a
difference between the behaviors of drunk
drivers and those who were talking on the
phone. Drunk drivers tended to be aggressive,
while those talking on the phone were more
sluggish, Drews said.
In addition, the researchers
found talking on the cell phone reduce
reaction time by 9 percent in terms of braking
and 19 percent in terms of picking up speed
after braking. "This is significant, because
it has an impact on traffic as a system,"
Drews said. "If we have drivers who are taking
a lot of time in accelerating once having
slowed down, the overall flow of traffic is
dramatically reduced," he said.
In response to safety
concerns, some states have outlawed the use of
hand-held cell phones while driving. But that
type of legislation may not be effective,
because the Utah researchers found no
difference in driver performance whether the
driver was holding the phone or talking on a
hands-free model.
"We have seen again and
again that there is no difference between
hands-free and hand-held devices," Drews said.
"The problem is the conversation," he added.
According to Drews, drivers
talking on the phone are paying attention to
the conversation -- not their driving.
"Drivers are not perceiving the driving
environment," he said. "We found 50 percent of
the visual information wasn't processed at all
-- this could be a red light. This increases
the risk of getting into an accident
dramatically," he said.
The reason that there aren't
more accidents linked to cell phone use is
probably due to the reactions of other -- more
alert -- drivers, Drews said. "Currently, our
system seems to be able to handle 8 percent of
cell-phone drivers, because other drivers
are paying attention," he said. "They are
compensating for the errors these drivers are
causing," he speculated.
This is a growing public
health problem, Drews said. As more people are
talking and driving, the accident rate will go
up, he said.
One expert agreed that
driving and cell phone use can be a deadly
mix.
"We don't believe talking on
a cell phone while driving is safe," said Rae
Tyson, a spokesman for the U.S. National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).
"It is a level of distraction that can affect
your driving performance," he said.
NHTSA has just completed a
study that showed that 75 percent of all
traffic accidents were preceded by some type
of driver distraction, Tyson said.
Tyson pointed out that
talking on the phone is very different than
talking to the person in the passenger seat.
"If you are engaged in a conversation with a
passenger, the passenger has some situational
awareness, whereas a person on the phone has
no idea what you are dealing with on the
road," he said.
"Our recommendation is that
you should not talk on the phone while
driving, whether it's a hand-held or hand-free
device," Tyson said. "We realize that a lot of
people believe that they can multi-task, and
in a lot of situations they probably can, but
it's that moment when you need your full
attention, and it's not there because you are
busy talking, that you increase the likelihood
that you are going to be involved in a crash,"
he said.
Tyson also sees this as a
growing public health issue. "Every time we do
a survey, there are more people using cell
phones while driving," he said. "And the
popularity of hand-held devices like Palm
Pilots or Blackberries, and people using them
in the car, is another problem," he added.
An industry spokesman said
cell phones don't cause accidents, people do.
"If cell phones were truly
the culprit some studies make them out to be,
it's only logical that we'd see a huge spike
in the number of accidents [since their
introduction]," said John Walls, a vice
president at the industry group, the Cellular
Telecommunications & Internet Association-The
Wireless Association. "To the contrary, we've
experienced a decline in accidents, and an
even more impressive decline in the accident
rate per million miles driven," he said.
"We believe educating
drivers on how to best handle all of the
possible distractions when you're behind the
wheel is the most effective means to make
better drivers, and that legislation focusing
on a specific behavior falls short of that
well-intended goal and creates a false sense
of security," Walls said.
(article from
www.forbes.com)
|