Applying Psychology
in the 21st Century
Driven to Distraction
Twenty-four year old Aiden Quinn
couldn’t believe his good fortune. At his
young age, he had beaten the competition
to land his dream job of conducting
trolleys through the streets of Boston. But
in just one moment his world came
crashing down around him: It was the
moment when he took his eyes off the
tracks to send a text message to his
girlfriend and the trolley he was driving
crashed into the one ahead of it.
If you’ve ever texted while driving, you’re
not alone. A recent survey conducted by
the AAA Foundation for Traffi c Safety
shows that nearly half of drivers aged 18 to
24 admit to doing so, even though the ma-
jority of them were aware that they were
increasing their risk of having an accident.
In fact, nearly 90% of survey respondents
rated texting while driving as a very seri-
ous threat to safety (AAA Foundation for
Traffi c Safety, 2008, 2009).
Researchers are now confi rming what
intuition suggests is true: The distraction
caused by texting while driving is ex-
tremely dangerous. One study used video
cameras to monitor truckers on long hauls
and found that they were 23 times more
likely to be in a collision while texting than
while not texting. In collisions caused by
texting, the driver had typically taken his
eyes off the road for about 5 seconds—a
seemingly short period of time until you
realize that a vehicle at highway speed
travels about 150 yards in those few sec-
onds (Virginia Tech Transportation Insti-
tute, 2009).
Another study using college students
and a driving simulator showed that text-
ing produced the same duration of about
5 seconds of distraction and that the stu-
dents were 8 times more likely to have a
collision while texting. Although those
may seem like better odds, they’re still
much worse than the risk presented by
other distractors such as changing the sta-
tion on a car’s radio. Even though the
study used students, who are likely skillful
at texting and multitasking, and light ve-
hicles that are more maneuverable than
trucks, the results clearly show that texting
while driving poses a terrifi c risk (Cooper
& Strayer, 2008).
Multitasking in general is diffi cult. For
instance, in one study, researchers divided
a group of college students into two
groups, one composed of students who
multitasked online regularly and a second
that did not. The frequent multitaskers
were more easily distracted, and they were
unable to fi lter out stimuli that were irrele-
vant to tasks that they were trying to com-
plete (Ophir, Nass, & Wagner, 2009)
If you, like many of the respondents to
the AAA Foundation for Traffi c Safety sur-
vey, believe that you’re the exception to the
rule, just keep one thing in mind: that’s
what Aiden Quinn thought, too. He lost his
job and is facing civil lawsuits and criminal
prosecution.
• Most people assume that they are able to text and drive at the same time without
declines in their driving ability. Why do you think that is the case, and how accu-
rate is their assumption?
• Why would frequent multitaskers be more distractible than those who multitask
less frequently?
RETHINK
Increasing research shows that texting while
driving is extremely dangerous.
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Ways of Exciting Students
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