A paper titled 'Impact of texting on young drivers’ behaviour and safety in urban and rural roads through a simulation experiment' co-authored by George Yannis, Alexandra Laiou, Panagiotis Papantoniou and Charalambos Christoforou
is now published in Journal of Safety Research. A driving simulator
experiment was carried out in which 34 young participants drove in
different driving scenarios; specifically, driving in good weather, in
raining conditions, in daylight and in night were examined. Lognormal
regression methods were used to investigate the influence of texting as
well as various other parameters on the mean speed and mean reaction
time. Binary logistic methods were used to investigate the influence of
texting use as well as various other parameters in the probability of an
accident. It appears that texting leads to statistically significant
decrease of the mean speed and increase of the mean reaction time in
urban and rural road environment. Simultaneously, it leads to an increased accident probability due to driver distraction and delayed reaction at the moment of the incident.
It appeared that drivers using mobile phones with a touch screen
present different driving behavior with respect to their speed, however,
they had an even higher probability of being involved in an accident.
ΠΗΓΗ: Ε.Μ.Π
ΠΗΓΗ: Ε.Μ.Π
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