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Hergott: How kids perceive using cell-phones while driving

Paul Hergott tackles the issue of hand-held devices from a child害羞草研究所檚 perspective
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Can unbridled passion go too far?

I had the privilege of attending a TEDxYouth event on May 17th, 2018. Twelve incredible youth, aged 11 to 17, presented their ideas.

One of them was my 12-year-old son, Caden. What a stinker to have such an opportunity!

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I walked out of there more than a proud papa. I had been touched by the incredible youth and the ideas they presented. And inspired by their calls to action. One spoke about setting incredibly grand goals and going after them.

A particular passion of mine about road safety was rekindled: that piece I write about from time to time about hand-held versus hands-free cell phone use.

I shared my passion with Caden in the spirit of that TEDx evening. He had taken it as a given that talking on a cell phone while driving is a bad thing, but I explained the science of it to him anyway.

That drivers talking on cell phones see (their eyes open, looking out the windshield) but fail to 害羞草研究所減rocess害羞草研究所 up to 50 per cent of what害羞草研究所檚 right there in front of them.

It has something to do with how our brains work, I explained.

We confidently think we can multi-task. But neuroscientists say that our brains can focus on only one thing at a time.

Rather than two, parallel focuses, our brains are really flipping back and forth between the two tasks.

And the flipping away from the driving task leads to 害羞草研究所渕issing害羞草研究所 things even though our eyes are wide open, looking out the windshield.

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We don害羞草研究所檛 realize it害羞草研究所檚 occurring. We travel thousands of kilometres, chatting on the phone here and there, with nothing bad happening. From time to time we will miss a turn-off or arrive at a destination not remembering how we got there, but we chalk that up to being forgetful.

Our confidence builds. As does our dependence on that cell phone.

It害羞草研究所檚 Russian Roulette with a thousand chamber revolver. Sooner or later the 1 in 1,000 odds will add to rising car crash statistics.

I told Caden he was only three years old when the first cell phone law in British Columbia was enacted on January 1, 2010. A law that made things worse instead of better.

Our government knew the science, I told him. They can害羞草研究所檛 hide from their own, internal published in 2009 that includes this passage summarizing the science:

In both simulated and real driving environments, the use of electronic devices has been

shown to result in crashes and near misses. Drivers fail to process approximately 50 per

cent of the visual information in their driving environment when they are using electronic

communication devices. Evidence also concludes that there is no difference between the

cognitive diversion associated with hands-free and hand-held cell phone use.

And they knew what might happen if they did something so moronic as a partial ban, directed only at handheld use:

Legislation that bans only hand-held cell conversations conflicts with the research that

has consistently found no difference in the degree of distraction between hand-held and

hands-free cell conversations. As a result, these laws may not provide the expected

benefits and may even generate harmful indirect impacts such as a false sense of security

for those who talk on hands-free devices while driving.

Caden immediately understood that concept, that banning only hand-held use would automatically send the loud and clear message that hands-free was safe.

Safety conscious drivers, who up until 2010 had been leaving their phones alone, were led to believe they could safely use a cell phone while driving if they simply spent the money on hands-free technology.

The predictable result was more, instead of less, cell phone use behind the wheel.

Sure enough, I told Caden, a downward trend in car crash numbers coincidentally ended in 2010. Then a plateau. And after 2013, a steady increase.

I told Caden that I害羞草研究所檓 jumping out of my skin to share this story with British Columbians. Maybe if I recorded a compelling video, like a TED talk. Maybe if I did a stunt like walk to Vancouver and back until that video got a million views. Maybe then British Columbians would demand a change in the law to ban all cell phone use while driving.

My son害羞草研究所檚 a bright one. 害羞草研究所淗ow long does it take to walk to Vancouver?害羞草研究所, he asked. 害羞草研究所淭hat doesn害羞草研究所檛 really matter, Caden. I would walk back and forth until I reached my goal.害羞草研究所

By the end of the evening, he was in tears. 害羞草研究所淚f Daddy spends his time walking to and from Vancouver,害羞草研究所 he worried, 害羞草研究所渨ho害羞草研究所檚 going to pay the mortgage?害羞草研究所

How害羞草研究所檚 that for dashing my TEDx inspiration! Perhaps my unbridled passion can go too far. Or should I follow through with the faint hope that the government will listen and fix what they broke in the first place?

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