Skip to main content

Texting doubles a driver's reaction time

Researchers at the Texas Transportation Institute have revealed how texting impairment is even greater than many experts previously believed, and demonstrates how texting drivers are less able to react to sudden roadway hazards.The findings of the study, the first published work in the US to examine texting while driving in an actual driving environment, extend to other driving distractions that involve reading or writing, such as checking e-mail or Facebook, according to the researchers.
May 3, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Researchers at the 2347 Texas Transportation Institute have revealed how texting impairment is even greater than many experts previously believed, and demonstrates how texting drivers are less able to react to sudden roadway hazards.The findings of the study, the first published work in the US to examine texting while driving in an actual driving environment, extend to other driving distractions that involve reading or writing, such as checking e-mail or 3009 Facebook, according to the researchers.The fact that the study was conducted in an actual driving environment is important, the researchers say. While simulators are useful, the dynamics of an actual vehicle are different, and some driver cues can't be replicated in a simulator.

By using a closed course, researchers created an environment similar to real-world driving conditions while providing a high degree of safety for the participants.The study, sponsored by the Southwest Region University Transportation Centre, was managed by Christine Yager, an associate transportation researcher in TTI's Centre for Transportation Safety. "Most research on texting and driving has been limited to driving simulators. This study involved participants driving an actual vehicle," Yager says. "So one of the more important things we know now that we didn't know before is that response times are even slower than we previously thought."The total distance covered by each driver in the study was slightly less than 11 miles.

In the interest of safety for both participants and the research staff, researchers minimized the complexity of the driving task, using a straight-line course that contained no hills, traffic or potential conflicts other than the construction zone barrels. Consequently, the driving demands that participants encountered were considerably lower than those they would encounter under real-world conditions."It is frightening," the researchers wrote, "to think of how much more poorly our participants may have performed if the driving conditions were more consistent with routine driving."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Doosan excavators key to Germany B 2 highway upgrade
    April 2, 2014
    Thannhauser + Ulbricht Straßen- und Tiefbau (TU) is employing four new Doosan DA30 articulated dump trucks (ADTs) and a new Doosan DX490LC-3 crawler excavator for the earthmoving work during the upgrade of Germany’s B2 federal highway. The machines being used by TU, based in Fremdingen, southern Germany, belong to the rental fleet of Rühle Maschinenpark from Untermünkheim-Haagen.
  • Are EVs too quiet to be safe?
    June 12, 2019
    Concern is being expressed in the UK over the safety of low noise, electric vehicles. Children and those with poor sight are particularly at risk from electric vehicles, which are much quieter in operation than conventional vehicles powered by internal combustion engines.
  • ARRB Systems' network-level continuous friction testing
    November 20, 2024
    Pavement safety assessments have traditionally focused on discrete low-density friction assessments using proven technology. But more detailed investigations and analysis are now feasible through improved technologies, explains Simon Tetley of ARRB Systems*.
  • Denso to field test V2V and V2X in China
    March 19, 2012
    Denso Corporation, in collaboration with Tongji University, Shanghai, will begin testing vehicle-to-vehicle and vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2X) technology on public roads in Taicang, Jiangsu Province, China on 22 March , 2012.