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Texting While Driving
Is texting while driving
really worse than drunk driving?
Texting,
or short message service (SMS), is a quick form of communication that
allows users to send 160 characters or less to and from their cell phones and
smartphones.
A
study by the Pew Research group in 2009 and 2010 reported that out of the
number of Americans who have cell phones, 58 percent of adults and 66 percent
of teens use them to text [source: Motavalli].
With
these high percentages of Americans using text messaging every year, many are
bringing the habit along with them when they drive.
The
same Pew study showed that 34 percent of teens who use their phone for texting
said they've done it while driving, and 47 percent of adults who texted said they
had done it while driving, too [source: Motavalli].
In
2008, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) reported that
almost 6,000 fatalities and over half of a million injuries were due to
accidents caused by drivers who were distracted [source: Motavalli].
The
study wasn't focused on texting, but it does show the seriousness of driving
while distracted.
Like
many other driving distractions, texting involves a certain amount of mental
attention as well as physical application which may be why 28 states have
banned drivers from texting while operating a vehicle [source: Motavalli].
But
is there really proof that texting while driving is more dangerous than drunk
driving?
Even
though research is just now being done to measure the effects of texting while
driving, some in the automotive industry and others in research circles say
that texting is definitely more dangerous than drunk driving.
Mainly
because taking a driver's eyes off the road significantly cuts down on his or
her ability to react to changes.
On
the next page, we'll take a look at two specific examples of how texting has
been found to impair a driver's ability more than driving while intoxicated.
Texting While Driving is Worse Than Drunk Driving
In
2009, Car and Driver conducted a driving test with their editor-in-chief and an
intern to prove or disprove that texting while driving was more dangerous than drunk driving.
The
first step of their experiment was to test and measure the reaction times of
both drivers while driving sober with no distractions, and then while reading
and sending text messages on their cell phones.
As
they read and sent text messages, their response time was measured based on the
time it took between when the brake light came on and when the driver applied
the brakes at both 35 miles per hour (56.3 kilometers per hour) and at 70 miles
per hour (112.7 kilometers per hour) [source: Chang].
Both
drivers had a longer response time while reading and sending the text messages
when compared to driving without any distractions.
After
the initial test, both drivers then consumed alcohol and
reached the legal driving limit for intoxication in their state.
After
running the same test again while driving drunk, response times for both
drivers were better when the driver was drunk, compared to when they were
reading or sending text messages while sober.
Car
and Driver writers mentioned that the test was performed on a closed airport runway, with no road signs and no turns.
Although
this test was performed on a closed course, slow response times due to texting
could result in serious consequences in real-world driving situations.
Another
test conducted by the Transport Research Laboratory in London took it a step
further.
It
found that drivers who texted had slower response times, were more likely to
drift in and out of lanes and even drove worse than those who were driving
while high on marijuana [source: Nugent].
The
study found that reaction times for those who texted while driving were 35
percent worse than when they drove without any distractions at all.
When
driving while intoxicated, the reaction time was only 12 percent worse than
when the driver was sober and driving without any texting distractions [source: Nugent].
The
researchers also found that there was a significant decrease in ability to
maintain a safe driving distance between vehicles while texting and steering
control dropped by 91 percent compared to driving without distraction [source: Nugent].
One
of the study's commissioners eventually concluded that texting while driving is
one of the most dangerous things a driver could do while behind the wheel of a
car.
Car Safety Is
there proof that texting while driving is more dangerous than drunk
driving?
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