

- #TEXTING WHILE DRIVING VERSUS UNDISTRACTED DRIVING INSTALL#
- #TEXTING WHILE DRIVING VERSUS UNDISTRACTED DRIVING DRIVERS#
If you absolutely must send a text or place a call, or if Snapchat just can’t wait, find a safe place to pull off the roadway first.Take a stand - for yourself! Let your friends know that you’d rather not ride with them if they drive distracted.Let your friends know that if they text you and you don’t answer, you’re probably driving and you’ll text them when you get stopped.
#TEXTING WHILE DRIVING VERSUS UNDISTRACTED DRIVING INSTALL#

Educators and government officials are working tirelessly to help others understand how dangerous cell phone use while driving really is. Officials are just now starting to understand how dangerous the practice is, and how many fatalities are occurring because of it. Texting and driving has become a very hot topic in the world of highway safety over the last few years. In addition to literally taking your mind off the task of driving, texting (or Facebooking, Instagramming, etc.) also takes your eyes and hands away from the task of driving. Your brain switches tasks in an instant, but it only takes an instant for something to happen in front of you.something you literally will never see until it’s too late. This is a phenomenon known as “inattention blindness.” The switching in your brain is happening so quickly, you don’t even consciously realize it’s happening however, it’s during these periods of inattention blindness that crashes happen.
#TEXTING WHILE DRIVING VERSUS UNDISTRACTED DRIVING DRIVERS#
Due to this rapid switching, drivers who are talking or texting can literally miss seeing up to 50% of their driving environment. The human brain is physically incapable of concentrating on two cognitive tasks at one time (such as carrying on a conversation and driving a vehicle.) Instead of processing both cognitive tasks at once, the brain rapidly switches between the two activities. One of the most important things people should understand about cell phone use while driving is that “multi-tasking” is a myth. The Driver Distraction in Commercial Vehicle Operations study found that texting while driving raises a drivers crash risk by 23 times. It takes approximately 4.6 seconds to read an incoming text message - the equivalent (at 55 MPH) of traveling the length of an entire football field, blind.
