Distracted driver behaviors and distracting conditions among adolescent drivers: findings from a naturalistic driving study

Auteur(s)
Foss, R.D. & Goodwin, A.H.
Jaar
Samenvatting

The proliferation of new communication technologies and capabilities has prompted concern about driving safety. This concern is particularly acute for inexperienced adolescent drivers. In addition to being early adopters of technology, many adolescents have not achieved the degree of automaticity in driving that characterizes experienced adults. Consequently, distractions may be more problematic in this group. Yet little is known about the nature or prevalence of distracted driving behaviours or distracting conditions among adolescent drivers. Vehicles of 52 high-school age drivers (N = 38 beginners and N = 14 more experienced) were equipped for 6 months with unobtrusive event-triggered data recorders that obtain 20-second clips of video, audio, and vehicle kinematic information when triggered. A low recording trigger threshold was set to obtain a sample of essentially random driving segments along with those indicating rough driving behaviours. Electronic device use (6.7%) was the most common single type of distracted behaviour, followed by adjusting vehicle controls (6.2%) and grooming (3.8%). Most distracted driver behaviours were less frequent when passengers were present. However, loud conversation and horseplay were quite common in the presence of multiple peer passengers. These conditions were associated with looking away from the road, the occurrence of serious events, and, to a lesser extent, rough driving (high g-force events). Common assumptions about adolescent driver distraction are only partially borne out by in-vehicle measurement. The association of passengers with distraction appears more complex than previously realized. The relationship between distractions and serious events differed from the association with rough driving. (Author/publisher)

Publicatie

Bibliotheeknummer
20150919 ST [electronic version only]
Uitgave

Journal of Adolescent Health, Vol. 54 (2014), No. 5 (May), Supplement, p. S50-60, 30 ref.

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