Why is texting while driving distracting




















Distracted Driving Cellphone Use. Virgin Islands prohibit all drivers from using hand-held cellphones while driving. All cellphone ban: No state bans all cellphone use for all drivers, but 36 states and D. Text messaging ban: 48 states, D. Virgin Islands ban text messaging for all drivers.

Missouri prohibits text messaging by drivers 21 years old or younger. Other states prohibit hand-held cellphone or all cellphone use by all or certain drivers in certain zones. While you may be appreciative for the ride, the driver has a responsibility to you and other drivers to give his or her full attention to the road. Encourage friends and family members to also make the commitment to drive phone-free. What you can do about distracted driving, as a Parent: Discuss the importance of driving without distractions with your child often.

Explain that driving is more than a privilege -- it is a responsibility. And most importantly, be sure that you are serving as a good role model by not using a cell phone while driving. While they may not admit it, children learn their driving habits and behaviors from their parents. Preferred Mutual believes that you can't Drive Assured if you're driving distracted!

Find an Agent Find an independent agent near you. Importantly, in all the driving-while-talking research, there is little to no difference in impairment between drivers using hands-free and hand-held phones. Merely thinking about something other than the road is enough to strain attention and increase your risk of a crash.

This is likely part of the reason or, shall I say, driving force behind the ill-informed policies that prohibit hands-on talking and texting but allow hands-free conversations. It is no surprise that texting feels worse. When we text, our eyes are averted, and of course we need to see to drive. Step 1: See. Step 2: Perceive. But there is more to texting than meets the eye.

While talking on the phone puts a strain on attention interfering with step 2 , texting fully switches our attention. It is not just divided, but completely taken over getting in the way of both step 1 and even more so step 2. But while texting is indeed worse than conversing while driving, it is not by much. Some researchers—using real cars, not simulators—found that hands-free phone calls are similarly distracting as conversations with another person in the car.

We may recognize on a cognitive level that distracted driving is stupid, but we have no accompanying visceral feeling of fear, no associated emotion to guide our decision-making in the moment of temptation.

If our hearts started racing as soon as our attention started to drift, we might be more inclined to stay focused. Furthermore, we feel immune to the risks that affect other people. Consistent with this, three out of four people think they are above average drivers a statistical impossibility. We are simply overconfident in our abilities. Finally, many of us have a lot of experience making bad driving decisions and not suffering any consequences. We imagine that the past will predict the future and ignore the actual risk.

Watch the most gruesome car accident video you can find on YouTube and play it in your head every time you think of reaching for the phone. Or to have a conversation. Or to get distracted in any other way. The real reason to stay on task while driving is to protect your most precious, most limited resource: attention.



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