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Drivers
on cell phones kill thousands
Study
explores mechanism behind deadly distraction
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Here
is how the new University of Utah simulations were conducted:
Participants
in the simulator used dashboard instruments, steering wheel
and brake and gas pedals from a Ford Crown Victoria sedan,
surrounded by three screens showing freeway scenes and traffic,
including a "pace car" that intermittently hit its brakes
32 times as it appeared to drive in front of study participants.
If
a participant failed to hit their own brakes, they eventually
would rear-end the pace car. Each participant drove four simulated
10-mile freeway trips lasting about 10 minutes each, talking
on a cell phone with a research assistant during half the
trips and driving without talking the other half. Only hands-free
phones were used to eliminate any possible distraction from
manipulating a hand-held cell phone.
Thirty
times each second, the simulator measured the participants'
driving speed, following distance and — if applicable — how
long it took them to hit the brakes and how long it took them
to regain speed.
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By Robert Roy
Britt
Senior writer
Finally, empirical proof
you can blame chatty 20-somethings for stop-and-go traffic on the
way to work.
A new study confirms that the reaction time of cell phone users
slows dramatically, increasing the risk of accidents and tying up
traffic in general, and when young adults use cell phones while
driving, they're as bad as sleepy septuagenarians.
"If you put a 20-year-old driver behind the wheel with a cell
phone, their reaction times are the same as a 70-year-old driver
who is not using a cell phone," said University of Utah psychology
professor David Strayer. "It's like instantly aging a large
number of drivers."
The study was announced Tuesday and is detailed in winter issue
of the quarterly journal Human Factors.
Traffic jams and death
Cell phone distraction causes 2,600 deaths and 330,000 injuries
in the United States every year, according to the journal's publisher,
the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society.
The reason is now obvious:
Drivers talking on cell phones were 18 percent slower to react to
brake lights, the new study found. In a minor bright note, they
kept a 12 percent greater following distance. But they also took
17 percent longer to regain the speed they lost when they braked.
That frustrates everyone.
"Once drivers on cell phones hit the brakes, it takes them
longer to get back into the normal flow of traffic," Strayer
said. "The net result is they are impeding the overall flow
of traffic."
Strayer and his colleagues have been down this road before. In 2001,
they found that even hands-free cell phone use distracted drivers.
In 2003 they revealed a reason:
Drivers look but don't see, because they're distracted by the conversation.
The scientists also found previously that chatty motorists are less
adept than drunken drivers with blood alcohol levels exceeding 0.08.
Separate research last year at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
supported the conclusion that hands-free cell phone use causes driver
distraction.
"With younger adults, everything got worse," said Arthur
Kramer, who led the Illinois study. "Both young adults and
older adults tended to show deficits in performance. They made more
errors in detecting important changes, and they took longer to react
to the changes."
The impaired reactions involved seconds, not just fractions of a
second, so stopping distances increased by car lengths.
Older drivers more cautious
The latest study used high-tech simulators. It included people aged
18 to 25 and another group aged 65 to 74. Elderly drivers were slower
to react when talking on the phone, too.
The simulations uncovered a twofold increase in the number of rear-end
collisions by drivers using cell phones.
Older drivers seem to be more cautious overall, however.
"Older drivers were slightly less likely to get into accidents
than younger drivers," Strayer said. "They tend to have
a greater following distance. Their reactions are impaired, but
they are driving so cautiously they were less likely to smash into
somebody." But in real life, he added, older drivers are significantly
more likely to be rear-ended because of their slow speed.
Other studies in the journal found:
- Telephone numbers presented by automated voice systems compete
for drivers' attention to a far greater extent than when the driver
sees the same information presented on a display.
- Interruptions to driving, such as answering a call, are likely
to be more dangerous if they occur during maneuvers like merging
to exit a freeway.
- Things could get worse. Wireless Internet, speech recognition
systems and e-mail could all be even more distracting.
Several readers wrote to
LiveScience questioning whether cell phones were really so bad for
drivers. Here is some additional information that helps illuminate
the death statistic.
The estimates of annual
deaths reported in this week's article (2,600) may well be low.
The number, for U.S. deaths related to drivers using cell phones,
comes from a 2002 study by the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis.
Researchers then estimated that the use of cell phones by drivers
caused approximately 2,600 deaths.
Because data on cellphone
use by motorists are limited, the range of uncertainty is wide,
those researchers said. The estimate of fatalities in that Harvard
report ranged between 800 and 8,000.
Importantly, the researchers noted (in
2002) that increasing cell phone use could be expected to cause
the annual death estimate to rise. The 2002 estimate, for example,
was up from an estimate of 1,000 deaths in the year 2000. Logic
suggests that the number — though just an estimate — could be much
higher in 2005.
The estimates are based largely
on mathematical models, but they are not without basis. In 2001
in California, for example, "at least 4,699 reported accidents were
blamed on drivers using cell phones, and those crashes killed 31
people and injured 2,786," according to an analysis by the Los Angeles
Times. That number can expected to be low, because of the lack of
formal procedures for noting cell phone use as a cause of a traffic
accident.
The Times also noted a 1997
study of Canadian drivers "who agreed to have their cell phone records
scrutinized found that the risk of an accident was four times greater
while a driver was using the phone."
Each year, about 42,000 people
die in U.S. auto accidents.
Source: MSNBC.MSN.COM
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