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3 August 2012
Using smartphones for social
networking while driving is more dangerous than drink driving or being high on
cannabis behind the wheel according to research published today by the IAM
(Institute of Advanced Motorists).
Despite this, eight per cent of drivers
admit to using smartphones for email and social networking while driving –
equivalent to 3.5 million licence holders1.
Twenty-four
per cent of 17-24 year old drivers – a group already at higher risk of being in
a crash – admit to using smartphones for email and social networking while
driving1.
For
their research, the IAM and TRL (Transport Research Laboratory) used DigiCar –
TRL’s car driving simulator – to examine the effects of young drivers using smartphones
to access facebook. In every test of driving performance, young people who were
using facebook while driving were badly affected.2
When
sending and receiving facebook messages:
· reaction times slowed by around 38% and
participants often missed key events;
· participants were unable to maintain a
central lane position resulting in an increased number of unintentional lane
departures; and
· were unable to respond as quickly to the car
in front gradually changing speed.
When
comparing these new results to previous studies the level of impairment on
driving is greater than the effects of drinking, cannabis and texting:
· Using a smartphone for social networking
slows reaction times by 37.6 per cent;
· texting slows reaction times by 37.4 per
cent;
· hands-free mobile phone conversation slows
reaction times by 26.5 per cent;
· cannabis slows reaction times by 21 per cent;
· alcohol (above UK driving limit but below
100mg per 100ml of blood) slows reaction time by between six and 15 per cent;
and
· alcohol at the legal limit slows reaction
times by 12.5 per cent.
The
IAM is calling for government action to highlight the dangers of using
smartphones behind the wheel. Phone manufacturers and social network providers
also have a key role to play in spreading the message. Attitudes to seatbelts
and drink driving have changed dramatically over the last thirty years, and,
with the right information, halting smartphone use could become a similar
success story.
IAM
chief executive Simon Best said: “This research shows how incredibly dangerous
using smartphones while driving is, yet unbelievably it is a relatively common
practice. If you’re taking your hand off the wheel to use the phone, reading
the phone display and thinking about your messages, then you’re simply not
concentrating on driving. It’s antisocial networking and it’s more dangerous
than drink driving and it must become just as socially unacceptable.
“Young
people have grown up with smartphones and using them is part of everyday life.
But more work needs to be done by the government and social network providers
to show young people that they are risking their lives and the lives of others
if they use their smartphones while driving.”
TRL
senior researcher Nick Reed said: "Our research clearly demonstrates that
driver behaviour was significantly and dramatically impaired when a smartphone
was being used for social networking. Drivers spent more time looking at their
phone than the road ahead when trying to send messages, rendering the driver
blind to emerging hazards and the developing traffic situation.
“Even
when hazards were detected, the driver's ability to respond was slowed. The
combination of observed impairments to driving will cause a substantial
increase in the risk of a collision that may affect not only the driver but
also their passengers and other road users. Smartphones are incredibly useful
and convenient tools when used appropriately and responsibly. Their use for
social networking when driving is neither."
The full
report is now available.
1. Based on survey in RAC ‘RAC
Report on Motoring 2011: Divided we drive’ http://www.rac.co.uk/report-on-motoring/report-2011/ and DVLA license statistics 2011.
2. IAM and TRL, 2012 ‘Smartphone use
while driving – a simulator study’
TRL, the UK’s Transport Research
Laboratory, is an internationally recognised centre of excellence, providing
independent research, consultancy, advice and solutions across a broad range of
transport issues to both public and private sector clients. TRL is also home to
DigiSim, the UK’s premier driving simulation centre.
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