The truth about using hands-free devices behind the wheel

Tue Mar 11, 2008 8:30AM EDT

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Many states (including California, New York, Washington, the District of Columbia, and Connecticut) have imposed laws requiring drivers to use hands-free devices to make phone calls. New Jersey even made violation of its law a first offense. But several studies over the years have found that talking on a hands-free device is not much safer than talking on a hand-held device.

A study by the American Psychological Association of over 500 drivers found that talking on a cell phone cut activity in areas of the brain used for driving by half. Drivers focusing on a phone conversation had slower reaction times, were less likely to recall objects on the road, and had a hard time noticing traffic around them. Researchers also noted that hands-free devices in the car posed the same hazards as hand-held devices.

A different study by the University of Utah tested drivers' use of hands-free cell phones on the road, and found (to no one's surprise) that chatty drivers were the main cause of traffic problems. Apparently, drivers talking on a cell phone were less likely to change lanes, and spent more time following slow-moving vehicles.

The latest research by Carnegie Mellon University questions hands-free laws, and whether their existence only gives drivers a false sense of safety. To test this theory, neuroscientist Marcel Just studied 29 volunteers who used a driving simulator inside an MRI brain scanner. The volunteers were tasked with driving a car along a virtual winding road, with and without distractions.

Researchers found that drivers would hit the guardrail and veer out of the center of the lane more often when they tried to answer true or false questions. Brain scans of the distracted drivers showed brain activity decreased in areas that process visual and spatial information, functions that are crucial for navigation. Once again, this proved that participating in a conversation is all it took to reduce a driver's focus on the road.

As reported in This is London, Just concluded:

  1. Drivers need to keep not only their hands on the wheel, they  also have to keep their brains on the road. Drivers' seats in many vehicles are becoming highly instrumented cockpits and during difficult driving situations they require the undivided attention of the driver's brain.

  2. The clear implication is that engaging in a demanding conversation could jeopardise judgment and reaction time.

So while there may be laws out there that ban the use of hand-held phones behind the wheel, the truth is the road will remain a dangerous place as long as drivers continue to carry phone conversations on hands-free devices - so be careful out there.

Link: Driving study deals blow to hands-free phones

 

 

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  • 66 Posted by apellazar on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:56PM EDT Report Abuse

    yah this discovery is indeed very interesting. just listen to interesting music than attending to a conversation - specially if you're topic is about problems....hehehehehe you will surely be destructed.

  • 67 Posted by duchess_athena2002 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    I agree handsfree is about your hands being free. It is common sense to keep yourself focused on driving when you are driving you are manuvering heavy machineary that is in all sense a death trap for you or anyone else around you. I personaly staff clear of drivers I notice talking on the phone while driving. I screen my calls while driving and keep my phone in my purse, because I value my life and nobodys phone call is so important to me that I risk my safe driving. Just ask yourself is it such a important call that you can't wait to give them your full attention.

  • 68 Posted by rmschesanek on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:44PM EDT Report Abuse

    Do we have nothing better to spend our money on??? I mean come on.... a driving simulator inside an MRI brain scanner. I just had an MRI of my knee which was $6000.00. Was it really necessary to spend $174000.00 to figure out that people are distracted in the car, whether they are talking on a phone or the person next to them. Don't really need to be a Neuroscientist to come to that conclusion!!!

  • 69 Posted by pjpsonj on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:14PM EDT Report Abuse

    Conversation while driving is a distraction whether on a cellphone or talking with a passenger in your vehicle. You have to be totally focused on the road; nom talking , no day dreaming, no thoughts about the music on the radio.

  • 70 Posted by mcp333a on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:13PM EDT Report Abuse

    Glad to see everyone understands 'THEY' must use common sense when driving!....there has been news regarding setting a law by this summer which requires 'no hand held devices allowed while driving'....additional revenue to the rescue!!! Can't wait to see what may be 'endangering' our lives next so that too can warrant a ticket! Where were these studies and lawmakers when my kids were young, the yacky passenger or the irritated spouse was in my car while I was driving??? Focus on responsibility as a driver, many things distract us in many activities we engage in besides driving!

  • 71 Posted by owen_raha on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    Well this is stupid.,,, just stupid.. NO Phones??? man these researchers should just stop wasting time to research these stuff when they or their family members use phones while driving, BLAH!!

  • 72 Posted by bobcandybobcandy on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    What makes cell phone users think that they are that important that they need to be contacted at every minute of the day/night? By the way, the "Star Trek" ear piece is a joke. It looks ridiculous stuck to the side of anyone's face. I personally know of no one who is really that IMPORTANT!

  • 73 Posted by slg82669 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:27PM EDT Report Abuse

    What's next? banning eating/drinking in the car? MacD's BK, Wendy's etc will make sure our well bought government will keep that from happening...

  • 74 Posted by olivia_g_hall on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:44PM EDT Report Abuse

    I am not surprised that most responses are just denial. I am guilty. I have observed that I am less responsive when on the phone and I tend to stay behind a slower moving vehicle when I'm talking because it's just more difficult to drive faster. This Friday while driving with my multitasking and cellphone talking real estate agent I noticed that she straddled lanes, stopped much later than she should to stopped vehicles in front of her and generally was driving unsafely. When I commented she said, "I've never been in an accident." I told her if I was killed in the one she had it wouldn't matter that she hadn't had any. The real question is, how many accidents did she cause. I have a bluetooth and I am going to try my best not to talk on the road and I encourage you to join me. And for those of you mentioning kids and additional passengers, they have been major causes of accidents as well, especially among young drivers.

  • 75 Posted by chero622 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:22PM EDT Report Abuse

    What the heck does this mean from the article?: " New Jersey even made violation of its law a first offense."

  • 76 Posted by tctigger7 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:58PM EDT Report Abuse

    What everyone seems to forget is that driving is a privilage and not a right, therefore maybe penalizing bad drivers (the ones that do not seem to pay attention and the ones who stop in the middle of a highway) is not such a bad idea after all.

  • 77 Posted by perezjolu on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:06PM EDT Report Abuse

    So, It would be the same driving with people. If you drive do not talk, and if you talk don not drive, or drive alone, GOOD eliminate the car pool.....we should back to horses and let them drive.

  • 78 Posted by jaeseal@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:27PM EDT Report Abuse

    What is so important that it can't wait until you stop the car. For mmany years we did not have cell phones and the world did not seem to stop. The thing that bugs me is this people who hold a cell phone in one hand, have an ear piece in the other ear, and then hold a cup of Starbucks in the other hand. Get real people and slow down. I have both a cell phone and an ear piece and I don't use either until I am stopped and not driving. My friends and workers will wait for me.

  • 80 Posted by indeed357 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:23PM EDT Report Abuse

    I really have to laugh @ most of these posts, especially those who want to complain about these findings. Sorry, I have to tend to agree, cell phones in vehicles need to be banned!!! If something is that important and the need to take a call is required, then pull off the road. Sometimes it feels like the movie "invasion of the body snatchers" instead it is "invasion of the cell phones". What, can't anybody in this world survive without looking at their phones every 5 seconds... it can be somewhat sickning @ times! 20 years ago they did not exsist but yet we all lived on.

  • 81 Posted by rgtgrandpa on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:38PM EDT Report Abuse

    I believe the truth of the matter is using a cell phone hands free ot not is a dangerous habit. I'll be the first one to tell you there was a time when I went from point A to point B that because I was talking on a hands-free telephone I didn't rememeber how I got to my destiny. For that reason alone it made me aware of the fact I was more in concentrating on what was being said on the phone than I was watchin where I was going. That scared me, and I never did it again. One of the comments was that if you repeatedly did use the phone when driving and something happened such as an accident, the driver shoud be punished accordingly. WHAT IF YOU TOOK A LIFE BECAUSE OF THE LACK OF CONCENTRATION. Could you live with yourself? Are You willing to take that chance? Isn't it better that you pull over to the side of the road, rather than endanger someone's life? I'm sorry the roads are dangerous enough without adding fuel to the fire. I believe that operating a vehicle with a phone to your lips when the vehicle is moving should be illegal, and a very stiff fine should be implemented against the driver. Hit them where it hurts the most and thats the pocketbook or wallet. Precautions should be taken, so that driving when talking on the cell should not be permitted in any state. Using all the media you can, TV, Radio, Billboards and News media to educate the people it is a crime. An incident without an accident or injury, a very stiff warning w/no fine. After that is made a matter of record repeat offenders should be fined, and if still ignored after a stiff fine take the drivers license. We don't need any more accidents on our streets and highways. Butchrgt

  • 82 Posted by wildwoodstairs on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:46PM EDT Report Abuse

    What about choking the chicken while driving? I know I've done it. I know others have.

  • 83 Posted by shelbykobes on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:18PM EDT Report Abuse

    ok this is all Bunk, come on people! They have one item right in this story! When we introduce a new technology into a car the chance for that technology to be present in a accident will go up. That doesn%

  • 84 Posted by yoci0922 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:56PM EDT Report Abuse

    Instead of focusing on how a phone conversation may be distracting, we should think about the million of billboards that are posted on the highway (new vehicles, movies, airfares, etc...). Personally if the person knows that they are not able to focus on the road and talk on the phone, they should not do it. But there are some individuals that are able to do both.

  • 85 Posted by duchess_athena2002 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    Speaking of kids talking to you in the car. On Disney every morning my kids watch lou and lou the safety patrol who tells kids that talking to grown-ups while driving is not safe. I remind my 7yr old motor motuh about this and tell her I am driving it can wait. A previous poster mentioned Satelite radio; well i got my Siruis radio and love it. Makes my boring drives better. I personaly do not like hearing about jane and johns love life or peoples petty problems while driving. Just give me my music with out all the talk show crap and I am happy.

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