The Effects of Simulated Cellular Phone Conversation on Road-Crossing Safety

The effects that cellular (cell) phone conversation may have on pedestrian road-crossing performance is unknown. A series of experiments was conducted using a virtual reality road crossing simulator to examine this issue. The participants were primarily university students aged between 18 and 24 yea...

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Main Author: Murray, Stephen James
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Psychology 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/1398
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-13982015-03-30T15:30:02ZThe Effects of Simulated Cellular Phone Conversation on Road-Crossing SafetyMurray, Stephen JamesCellular PhoneMobile PhoneRoad-CrossingDivided AttentionDual-TaskPedestrianThe effects that cellular (cell) phone conversation may have on pedestrian road-crossing performance is unknown. A series of experiments was conducted using a virtual reality road crossing simulator to examine this issue. The participants were primarily university students aged between 18 and 24 years old, although one study compared a group aged 18 to 24 to a group between 50 and 67 years old. Two experimental situations were used: a gap-choice situation, in which the participants had to choose a gap to cross through; and an infrequency situation, where vehicles were present on only 10% of the trials. Participants were impaired by a simulated phone conversation task when compared to no-conversation task, as evidenced by longer reaction times, slower walking speeds, poorer gap choices, and more cautious behaviours. Most importantly, conversation was related to a decrease in the mean margins of safety, and the participants were hit or nearly hit by vehicles more often when talking. The general performance of the older participants did not differ from that of the younger participants, and both groups were impaired to a similar extent by the conversation task. Participants were found to use irrelevant distance information to inform their gap-choice decisions, a strategy associated with a decrease in safety as the distance between the vehicles increased. It was also found that their use of time-to-arrival information was impaired when engaged in the conversation task. Overall, talking on a cell phone while crossing a road may represent an unnecessary increase in risk; therefore, care should be taken if these two acts are being conducted concurrently.University of Canterbury. Psychology2008-09-07T23:49:12Z2008-09-07T23:49:12Z2006Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/1398enNZCUCopyright Stephen James Murrayhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Cellular Phone
Mobile Phone
Road-Crossing
Divided Attention
Dual-Task
Pedestrian
spellingShingle Cellular Phone
Mobile Phone
Road-Crossing
Divided Attention
Dual-Task
Pedestrian
Murray, Stephen James
The Effects of Simulated Cellular Phone Conversation on Road-Crossing Safety
description The effects that cellular (cell) phone conversation may have on pedestrian road-crossing performance is unknown. A series of experiments was conducted using a virtual reality road crossing simulator to examine this issue. The participants were primarily university students aged between 18 and 24 years old, although one study compared a group aged 18 to 24 to a group between 50 and 67 years old. Two experimental situations were used: a gap-choice situation, in which the participants had to choose a gap to cross through; and an infrequency situation, where vehicles were present on only 10% of the trials. Participants were impaired by a simulated phone conversation task when compared to no-conversation task, as evidenced by longer reaction times, slower walking speeds, poorer gap choices, and more cautious behaviours. Most importantly, conversation was related to a decrease in the mean margins of safety, and the participants were hit or nearly hit by vehicles more often when talking. The general performance of the older participants did not differ from that of the younger participants, and both groups were impaired to a similar extent by the conversation task. Participants were found to use irrelevant distance information to inform their gap-choice decisions, a strategy associated with a decrease in safety as the distance between the vehicles increased. It was also found that their use of time-to-arrival information was impaired when engaged in the conversation task. Overall, talking on a cell phone while crossing a road may represent an unnecessary increase in risk; therefore, care should be taken if these two acts are being conducted concurrently.
author Murray, Stephen James
author_facet Murray, Stephen James
author_sort Murray, Stephen James
title The Effects of Simulated Cellular Phone Conversation on Road-Crossing Safety
title_short The Effects of Simulated Cellular Phone Conversation on Road-Crossing Safety
title_full The Effects of Simulated Cellular Phone Conversation on Road-Crossing Safety
title_fullStr The Effects of Simulated Cellular Phone Conversation on Road-Crossing Safety
title_full_unstemmed The Effects of Simulated Cellular Phone Conversation on Road-Crossing Safety
title_sort effects of simulated cellular phone conversation on road-crossing safety
publisher University of Canterbury. Psychology
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/1398
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