Distracted drivers plague nation's roadways

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Buy Bureau County Republican Photos »

(BPT) - Many people who encounter a car weaving wildly out of its lane, speeding up and slowing down randomly, veering into oncoming traffic or breezing through stop signs will immediately think “drunk driver.” 

While drunk driving is an extremely dangerous hazard on American roadways, this behavior is just as easily associated with sober but distracted drivers – who can be just as dangerous as drivers who have had too much to drink.

In fact, distracted driving is so out of hand that U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood called it “an epidemic.”

According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, 3,092 people died in crashes involving a distracted driver in 2010, the most recent year for which there is data available, and an estimated 416,000 were injured in motor vehicle crashes involving a distracted driver.

“The dangers of distracted driving are extremely real and completely avoidable,” says James Fults, vice president of personal auto insurance at Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company. “All of us, no matter how old or young we are and no matter how much experience we have behind the wheel, need to remember that when we’re driving there is only one thing we should be concentrating on, and that’s driving.”

Researchers say multi-tasking is actually a myth and that the human brain can only fully concentrate on one cognitively challenging task at a time – like having a conversation or driving. Doing both of these things at once, even when using a “hands-free” cellphone device, requires the brain to quickly switch back and forth between the two activities, always leaving one task short-changed.

This inability to multitask leads to “inattention blindness” – looking at but not seeing something right in front of the viewer. Alarmingly, estimates suggest that drivers using cellphones look at but fail to see up to 50 percent of the information in their driving environment, according to The National Safety Council.

Distracted driving is any activity, coupled with operating a vehicle, that takes attention away from driving. There are three main types of distracted driving: visual, which involves taking one’s eyes off the road; manual, which involves taking one’s hands off the wheel; and cognitive, which involves taking one’s mind off the operation of the vehicle. 

Comments


National Video