Investigating the Protracted Effect of Cell Phone Use on Distracted Driving

A number of studies have been done in the field of driver distraction, specifically on the use of cell phone for either conversation or texting while driving. However, till now, researchers have focused on the driving performance of drivers when they were actually engaged in the task. The primary objective of this paper is to analyze the post event effect of cell phone usage (texting and conversation) in order to verify whether the distracting effect lingers on after the actual event had ceased. It utilizes a driving simulator study of thirty-six participants to test whether a significant decrease in driver performance occurs during cell phone usage and after the usage. Surrogate measures used to represent lateral and longitudinal control of the vehicle were standard deviation (SD) of Lane Position and Mean Velocity respectively. Results suggest there were no significant decrease in driver performance (both lateral and longitudinal control) during and after the cell phone conversation. For the texting event, there were significant decreases in driver performance in both the longitudinal and lateral control of the vehicle during the actual texting task. The diminished longitudinal control ceased immediately after the texting event but the diminished lateral control lingered on for an average of 3.38 seconds. The result indicates that the distraction and subsequent elevated crash risk of texting while driving linger on even after the texting event has ceased. Such finding has safety and policy implications in the fight to reduce distracted driving.

  • Supplemental Notes:
    • This paper was sponsored by TRB committee AND10 Vehicle User Characteristics.
  • Corporate Authors:

    Transportation Research Board

    500 Fifth Street, NW
    Washington, DC  United States  20001
  • Authors:
    • Thapa, Raju
    • Codjoe, Julius
    • Ishak, Sherif
    • McCarter, Kevin
  • Conference:
  • Date: 2015

Language

  • English

Media Info

  • Media Type: Digital/other
  • Features: Figures; Photos; References;
  • Pagination: 15p
  • Monograph Title: TRB 94th Annual Meeting Compendium of Papers

Subject/Index Terms

Filing Info

  • Accession Number: 01551695
  • Record Type: Publication
  • Report/Paper Numbers: 15-1291
  • Files: TRIS, TRB, ATRI
  • Created Date: Jan 27 2015 11:24AM