Skip to main content

In-car technology increases distraction

In-car technology increases the risk of driver distraction.
By MJ Woof March 24, 2020 Read time: 1 min
Older generation cars have simpler dashboards with far fewer distractions for drivers than modern vehicles featuring the latest in-car systems

A new study highlights the danger of distraction posed by in-car technology. The study was carried out jointly by the TRL and IAM Roadsmart in the UK. The aim of the study was to evaluate the impacts of in-vehicle infotainment systems such as Android Auto and Apple CarPlay on driving performance.
 
The TRL authored study and report explored both voice and touch control, with both found to distract drivers – though touch control proved the more distracting of the two.

The results revealed that participants’ reaction times when engaging with either system were over 50% slower than normal. Stopping distances, lane control and response to external stimuli were all impaired.

Significantly, the participants’ reaction times were slower than someone who had used cannabis and five times worse than someone driving at the legal limit of alcohol consumption.

www.iamroadsmart.com/infotainment

Related Content

  • US road safety improving
    April 8, 2024
    US road safety is improving, but slowly.
  • Get out of my way!
    May 1, 2018
    Paramedics responding to a serious medical emergency in the UK said that they were disgusted when they returned to their ambulance to find a note attached to the windscreen. The note complained that the vehicle had blocked a driveway, preventing a person from moving a car. The paramedics received praise for their efforts in saving the life of someone who had been taken seriously ill, while criticisms were aimed at the selfishness of the unnamed complainant who wrote the note. The writer later admitted his s
  • GHSA wants more action on distracted driving
    May 5, 2021
    Some US state laws have not kept pace with technology, says lobby group StopDistractions.org
  • In-car technology to cut crashes
    December 15, 2015
    New safety requirements could see vehicles in Europe being fitted with in-car technology to cut crashes. The European Commission is working on plans to develop new a safety strategy that will require vehicle producers to introduce new systems. One of the technologies being considered is for in-car systems that would use facial recognition camera systems to detect whether a driver is fatigued at the wheel or using a cellphone while driving. According to the Transport Research Laboratory, this technology coul