The Inconvenient Truth About Mobile Phone Distraction: Understanding the Means, Motive and Opportunity for Driver Resistance to Legal and Safety Messages
Changes in Driver Behaviour as a Function of Handsfree Mobile Phones – A Simulator Study
Helen Wells,
Gemma Briggs and
Leanne Savigar-Shaw
The British Journal of Criminology, 2021, vol. 61, issue 6, 1503-1520
Abstract:
Evidence for how phone-use impacts driving is clear: phone-using drivers are four times more likely to crash; demonstrate poor hazard detection ability; take longer to react to any hazards they notice; and can look yet fail to see. However, drivers are often resistant to research findings and, despite it being an enforceable offence, many still admit to using their phones. This paper combines what is known about the dangers of distracted driving with what research tells us about how drivers think about themselves, the law, and their risk of both crashing and being prosecuted. These blended insights explain why evidence may be resisted both by drivers and policymakers, highlighting the inconvenient truth of the distraction caused by mobile phone-use.
Keywords: mobile phone; distraction; roads policing; driving; risk; resistance (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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