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Keeping it Real Behind the Wheel

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Broken bones Bruising Traumatic brain injury (lifelong) Spinal cord injury 30,000 are hospitalized Distracted Driving is Deadly Source: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Keeping it Real Behind the Wheel


1
Keeping it RealBehind the Wheel
  • Your Name Here
  • Title
  • Agency

2
To do two things at once is to do neither.
  • Publilius Syrus, Roman slave
  • First century B.C.

3
Statistics
  • Keep you safe on the road
  • Teens have the highest crash risk of any age
    group.
  • The age group with the greatest proportion of
    distracted drivers was the under-20 age group.
    (NHTSA)
  • Limited driving experience
  • Passengers
  • Alcohol use
  • Not wearing seat belts
  • Sleep deprivation
  • Cell phones and texting
  • Motor vehicle crashes is the leading cause of
    death of 3 34 year olds.
  • __of the crashes in (Your) County resulted from
    driver inattention/distraction in 2010.
    (www.safeny.ny.gov)

4
What is Distracted Driving?
  • Visual something that takes your eyes off the
    road
  • In-car technology
  • Out-of-car distractions
  • Cognitive something that takes your mind off
    the road
  • Emotions road rage, conversations, drowsiness,
    sickness
  • People usually dont realize when they are
    cognitively distracted.
  • Manual something that takes your hands off the
    wheel
  • Cell phones
  • I-pods
  • Laptops

5
Drowsy Driving is Distracted Driving100,000
crashes each year are caused by fatigued
drivers.
  • Whos at risk? Young people (16-29 year olds)
  • Drivers under the age of 25 are involved in more
    than ½ of all crashes in which drivers have
    fallen asleep.
  • What are some warning signs of drowsy driving?
  • How do we avoid driving while tired?
  • Get enough sleep
  • Avoid alcohol
  • Limit driving between midnight-6am
  • Drink caffeine
  • Recognize the signs and take action!

Source National Sleep Foundation
6
Drowsy Driving in Broome County
7
Cell Phone Exercise
  • Volunteer Fast texter
  • I have to have the car home by nine or my
    parents will kill me.
  • Record 7.5 seconds

8
Driver Distractions
  • For every 1 mile per hour, a car travels 1.47
    feet per second.
  • Traveling at 40 mph, a car will travel 59 feet in
    1 second.
  • If you take your eyes off the road for 2 seconds,
    youve just traveled 118 feet.
  • The average response time is about 1.5 seconds.
  • Your total distance traveled is 206.5 feet before
    you could step on the brake or take evasive
    action.

9
That is
  • 13 Toyota Camrys
  • 25 Mini Coopers
  • 3 18 Wheelers
  • Just short a 747
  • 70 yards on a football field

10
Multitasking and the Brain
  • Human brains do not perform two tasks at the same
    time.
  • Process
  • Select information brain will attend to
  • Process information
  • Encode to create a memory
  • Store information
  • Retrieve
  • Execute or act on information

11
Distractions and the Brain
Marcel Just, Director of the Center for Cognitive
Brain Imaging Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburg
h, Pennsylvania
12
Main result The parietal activation associated
with driving decreases substantially (by 37)
with sentence listening.
Driving While Sentence Listening
Driving Alone
13
Increase in Driver Error
  • Increase in weaving
  • Increase in the number of hits to the side of the
    road
  • 8.7 hits in driving alone
  • 12.8 hit in driving with sentences
  • Our brains cant do two things at once

14
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15
Inattention Blindness
16
Encoding Stage
  • Brain filters information due to overload
  • Drivers not aware of information filtered out
  • Information does not get into memory
  • Drivers miss critical information on potential
    hazards

17
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18
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19
Looking But Not Seeing
  • Drivers using cell phones fail to see up to 50
    of the information in their driving environment.
  • Hands-free is not risk free. Less likely to see
  • High and low relevant objects
  • Visual cues
  • Exits, red lights and stop signs
  • Navigational signage
  • Content of objects

20
The Monkey Business Illusion The Invisible
Gorilla
  • A driver must always be prepared to respond to
    the unexpected.
  • If we are multitasking- we cannot do that.

21
Passenger Conversations
  • Adult passengers share awareness of driving
    situation, a safety benefit.
  • Front seat passenger reduce crash risk by 38
    compared to cell phone conversations.
  • Adults with passengers have lower crash rates
    than adults without passengers.
  • Not true for novice teen drivers

22
To do two things at once is to do neither.
  • Publilius Syrus, Roman slave
  • First century B.C.

23
Consequences of a Crash
  • Fatalities
  • Injuries
  • 450,000 teenagers are injured but survive.
  • Broken bones
  • Bruising
  • Traumatic brain injury (lifelong)
  • Spinal cord injury
  • 30,000 are hospitalized

24
Distracted Driving is Deadly
  • Turn off the phone
  • Four times more likely to crash on a cell phone.
  • Hands-free is not necessarily risk-free. Your
    brain doesnt know the difference.
  • Effective July 12 Illegal to use handheld
    electronic devices while vehicle is in motion. 3
    driver penalty points and 150 fine. Primary
    offence.
  • Plan ahead
  • Have alternate routes in mind.
  • Give yourself enough time.
  • Make adjustments
  • Adjust music, climate controls, GPS devices and
    mirrors BEFORE you drive.
  • Designate a rider
  • Help you navigate, be an alternate driver, answer
    text messages and phone calls for you.
  • Have the right attitude about driving
  • You are driving a 3,000lb weapon with the
    potential to kill.
  • Remember, you might be the safest driver on the
    road but that doesnt mean everyone else is.
  • So make good choices and use common sense.

Source National Road Safety Foundation
25
Any questions?
Picture taken from Nationwide Insurance
Distracted Driver Survey Bill Windsor Associate
Vice President of Safety
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