Driving & Talking

17
The issue of cell phones have become commonplace in society that talking about one while driving is extremely unsafe, but recent research has shown that if the person you are talking to can see the road from your viewpoint, it can markedly improve performance compared to conversations where they cannot.

Transcript of Driving & Talking

Page 1: Driving & Talking

The issue of cell phones have become commonplace in society that talking about one while driving is extremely

unsafe, but recent research has shown that if the person you are talking to can see the road from your viewpoint, it can

markedly improve performance compared to conversations where they cannot.

Page 2: Driving & Talking

For years research has suggested that passengers, while being deemed as

distractions to drivers, can actually prove to be helpful to the driver, especially if the

passenger is an experienced driver.

Page 3: Driving & Talking

Beckman Institute director and University of Illinois psychology professor Arthur Kramer led a research team to determine the true distraction to drivers and the varying degrees of harm forms

of communication affect performance.

Page 4: Driving & Talking

For the study, they set up three groups of college-age participants who were subject to different forms of distraction through verbal communication while driving in a simulation

involving unpredictable cars.

Page 5: Driving & Talking

The three test groups consisting of a driver with a passenger, a driver talking on a hands-free device, and driver communicating with someone verbally who could see from the

driver's viewpoint.

Page 6: Driving & Talking

The last group was a control group with only a driver in the simulation with no

distractions.

Page 7: Driving & Talking

The participants were graded on how well they maintained their distance from other

cars, their speed, how effectively, they found and used in the designated exit, and whether

or not they had any collisions.

Page 8: Driving & Talking

Unsurprisingly, driving alone proved to be the safest option of the 4 groups.

Page 9: Driving & Talking

They had noticeably fewer accidents than drivers with a passenger.

Page 10: Driving & Talking

While passengers help keep track of road conditions, exits, and some traffic they did

not, however aid in the accident prevention and in some cases led to them.

Page 11: Driving & Talking

Cell phone conversations with someone with no knowledge of the driver’s viewpoint

inside or outside the vehicle were significantly more dangerous.

Page 12: Driving & Talking

Traffic accidents tripled compared to the control group of a driver silently driving

alone.

Page 13: Driving & Talking

Drivers who held conversations with callers who shared the same viewpoint inside and

outside the vehicle displayed interesting results.

Page 14: Driving & Talking

These drivers were less likely to have a collision than those whose cell phone

partner couldn't see what we’re going on.

Page 15: Driving & Talking

Researchers noted that the conversation was affected by the current road and traffic conditions

while the driver and the cell phone participant talked and shared characteristics with those in the

passenger group.

Page 16: Driving & Talking

Both groups showed that they aid the driver with some aspects of safer driving, but ultimately are

less safe than driving alone, but significantly more safe than talking to someone who has no

viewpoint on the road and traffic.

Page 17: Driving & Talking

With accidents reduced by 40-50% just by having the other person on the phone being able to see

what is going on, products like Google Glass could allow for shared viewpoint driving in the not so

distant future.