The amount of visual distraction is a primary factor in how much in-cab technology increases crash risk for commercial drivers, according to a new study conducted by the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute.

Merely talking on a hands-free phone appears not to be a major factor  – it is the ‘manual’ (i.e. reaching and dialing) type of functions that are associated with increased risk.

Driver in Cab using CellphoneThe study, commissioned by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, also found that company fleet cell phone policies cut risks more than state cell phone laws.

Data, collected over a one-year period, included:

  • 1,085 crashes
  • 8,375 near crashes
  • 30,661 “crash-relevant conflicts” and
  • 211,711 baselines

The data set was collected by DriveCam, a vendor of onboard safety monitoring systems aimed at reducing risky driving behaviors. The DriveCam  monitoring system captured video of the driver’s face and forward road view from fleets in real-world operations.

The results from this study support results from a previous FMCSA-funded study also conducted by VTTI.

As indicated by the previous study, using a cell phone to text, e-mail or access the Internet while driving is in a category of risk all by itself, with drivers 163 times more likely to be involved in a safety-critical event.

This is higher even than the previous study, where the odds were found to be 23 times higher. (One difference is the previous study only looked at tractor-trailer drivers, whereas this new study included a wider range of commercial vehicles.)

The study also found that truck and bus drivers in the study who dialed a cell phone while driving significantly increased their odds of involvement in a safety-critical event (by 3.51 times).

The study found big differences in risk depending on exactly what drivers were doing with the phones.

The use of a cell phone was broken down into sub-tasks that included reaching, dialing, and talking/listening. The study found that reaching and dialing have a high degree of risk, but talking/listening does not.  Even drivers talking and listening on a hand-held phone increased their risk so slightly it was not regarded as significant by the researchers.

In essence, although talking on the cell phone does not present an increased risk, a driver must take several risk-increasing steps in order to use the electronic device for conversation.

This is an important finding, said researchers, suggesting that much of this risk may be addressed through improved system interface design.

The study also looked at the effectiveness of fleet cell phone policies and state cell phone laws regarding cell phone use while driving. The odds of a driver using a cell phone while driving were 17 percent less likely under a fleet cell phone policy compared to no fleet cell phone policy. However, the existence of a state cell phone law did not significantly reduce the likelihood of drivers using their cell phone while driving.

As has been found in other naturalistic driving studies, non-driving tasks that take the driver’s eyes away from the roadway had the greatest risk – e.g texting, e-mailing, accessing the Internet, dialing a cell phone, reaching for cell phone, and reaching for a headset/earpiece.

It appears that a key difference between these high-risk and low-risk non-driving tasks involves the amount of visual distraction involved. Non-driving tasks associated with high visual attention have the highest odds of involvement in a safety-critical event.

Rich Hanowski, director of VTTI’s Center for Truck & Bus Safety, notes that “the take-away message is that drivers must keep their eyes on the road and tasks or activities that divert eyes from the road are risky.”

Read the VTTI Press Release.

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