|
Courtesy
of West Bend Mutual Insurance Company Car
Travels 100 Yards During Four-Second Distraction
DES
PLAINES, Ill. - As an incentive for paying attention while
driving, consider this: at 55 miles per hour, you travel the
length of a football field while taking your eyes off the road
for less than four seconds.
And
a just-released study using magnetic resonance images of brain
activity indicates people performing two demanding tasks
simultaneously, such as driving and conversing, use a smaller
portion of the brain on each function than they would if each
were done alone. The study, published in the August 1 issue of
the journal NeuroImage, did not deal directly with driving and
talking but it involved tasks that engage similar brain
regions. The study was led by Dr. Marcel Just, a psychology
professor and co-director of the Center for Cognitive Brain
Imaging at Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh. Plans are
under way for a similar study using driving simulators while
someone is talking to the "driver."
"Dr.
Just's study underscores an aspect of cellular phones that
often is overlooked in current debates, that is the
conversation itself," said David Golden, National
Association of Independent Insurers (NAII) director of
commercial lines. "Although holding a phone - or anything
else - in your hand may interfere somewhat with your driving,
a bigger problem may be the conversation, especially if it
gets involved or emotional. Whenever you get engrossed in a
conversation, you pay less attention to what is going on
around you. In a car, that can be very serious - even
fatal."
Based
on a 1996 study, the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration (NHTSA) estimates that driver distraction of
all types contributes to 20 to 30 percent of all serious
traffic accidents.
"All drivers have a responsibility to exercise good
judgment in all of their driving activities," Golden
said. "The lead role in improving motorist awareness and
driving skills should be borne by driver licensing officials
and vehicle safety authorities, including state motor vehicle
departments and the U.S. Department of Transportation. But the
person behind the wheel must make a concerted effort to always
be alert as to conditions and activity on the roadway."
Golden noted that a variety of distractions can compete for a
driver's attention - from cell phones and intense
conversations with passengers in the vehicle to eating,
personal grooming and looking at maps and newspapers. He
suggested that drivers make a conscious effort to minimize
those distractions, and preferably to engage in them only when
the vehicle is stopped.
"Distractions are only going to increase as car
manufacturers install more information and entertainment
equipment in vehicles," Golden said. "While those
devices are helpful, they should be used only when the vehicle
is stopped, or located where the driver can't see them."
Among distracting devices that already are being installed in
cars, or soon will be, are those providing Internet and e-mail
access, voice mail, electronic maps and navigational systems,
hi-fi digital stereo, compact disc player, DVD player, VCR and
compact television screens.
A
recent survey by one NAII member company found that 69 percent
of people eat while driving, 12 percent apply makeup or shave
and seven percent read a newspaper or book. A 1997 study in
the New England Journal of Medicine found that talking on a
phone while driving quadrupled the risk of an accident and was
almost as dangerous as drunken driving.
"The role that cell phones may play in traffic accidents
is uncertain, in part because few people would admit to using
a phone when they have an accident," Golden said.
"States are only now beginning to add a provision in
their accident report forms so police can indicate whether a
phone was being used - again, if the driver would admit it or
someone witnessed it."
The abundance of cell phones is growing rapidly. A NHTSA
survey completed in January 2001 found that 54 percent of
motor vehicle drivers in the United States usually have a cell
phone in their vehicles or carry one while driving. Almost 80
percent of those drivers leave the phones on while driving and
73 percent report having talked on the phones while driving.
New
York became the first state this year to ban the use of
hand-held phones while driving. Several communities had done
the same earlier. None of those measures prohibit hands-free
phones.
Golden offered several suggestions to minimize driver
distractions:
-
Don't
plan to fill traffic time with phone conversations. Keep
your mind on driving.
-
If
you know you will be tempted to look at a newspaper,
business report or day planner if it's handy, put it in
the trunk before you leave.
-
Be
sure there is nothing in the car that will slide around or
tip over while you are on the road.
-
Plan
your route and complete your grooming before starting the
car.
-
Preset
the climate control, radio or CD and don't fiddle with
them once you are under way unless you are stopped, as at
a red light.
-
If
you are not familiar with the car, such as in a rental
vehicle, identify the location of signals, wipers and
lights before starting out.
-
If
you are hungry or thirsty, stop and take a break rather
than eat or drink while driving.
-
National Association for Independent Insurers
NAII,
based in suburban Chicago, is the nation's leading
property/casualty trade association with more than 690 member
companies writing more than $98 billion in annual premium.
NAII members write more than 33 percent of the
property/casualty insurance in the United States.
Back
|