In-car countermeasures open window and music revisited on the real road : popular but hardly effective against driver sleepiness.

Author(s)
Schwarz, J.F. Ingre, M. Fors, C. Anund, A. Kecklund, G. Taillard, J. Philip, P. & Akerstedt, T.
Year
Abstract

This study investigated the effects of two very commonly used countermeasures against driver sleepiness, opening the window and listening to music, on subjective and physiological sleepiness measures during real road driving. In total, 24 individuals participated in the study. Sixteen participants received intermittent 10-min intervals of: (i) open window (2 cm opened); and (ii) listening to music, during both day and night driving on an open motorway. Both subjective sleepiness and physiological sleepiness (blink duration) was estimated to be significantly reduced when subjects listened to music, but the effect was only minor compared with the pronounced effects of night driving and driving duration. Open window had no attenuating effect on the sleepiness measures. No significant long-term effects beyond the actual countermeasure application intervals occurred, as shown by comparison to the control group (n = 8). Thus, despite their popularity, opening the window and listening to music cannot be recommended as sole countermeasures against driver sleepiness. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20120810 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Journal of Sleep Research, 2012, March 28 [Epub ahead of print], 5 p., 14 ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.