Mobile phone use while cycling: Incidence and effects on behaviour and safety

The effects of mobile phone use on cycling behaviour were studied. In study 1, the prevalence of mobile phone use while cycling was assessed. In Groningen 2.2% of cyclists were observed talking on their phone and 0.6% were text messaging or entering a phone number. In study 2, accident-involved cyclists responded to a questionnaire. Only 0.5% stated that they were using their phone at the time of the accident. In study 3, participants used a phone while cycling. The content of the conversation was manipulated and participants also had to enter a text message. Data were compared with just cycling and cycling while listening to music. Telephoning coincided with reduced speed, reduced peripheral vision performance and increased risk and mental effort ratings. Text messaging had the largest negative impact on cycling performance. Higher mental workload and lower speed may account for the relatively low number of people calling involved in accidents. Statement of Relevance: Although perhaps mainly restricted to flat countries with a large proportion of cyclists, mobile phone use while cycling has increased and may be a threat to traffic safety, similar to phone use while driving a car. In this study, the extent of the problem was assessed by observing the proportion of cyclists using mobile phones, sending questionnaires to accident-involved cyclists and an experimental study was conducted on the effects of mobile phone use while cycling.

[1]  K A Brookhuis,et al.  The effects of mobile telephoning on driving performance. , 1991, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[2]  David Crundall,et al.  Regulating Conversation During Driving: A Problem for Mobile Telephones? , 2005 .

[3]  Moshe Eizenman,et al.  An on-road assessment of cognitive distraction: impacts on drivers' visual behavior and braking performance. , 2007, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[4]  Linda Ng Boyle,et al.  The effect of distractions on the crash types of teenage drivers. , 2007, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[5]  R. Tibshirani,et al.  Association between cellular-telephone calls and motor vehicle collisions. , 1997, The New England journal of medicine.

[6]  Richard Wener,et al.  Mobile telephones, distracted attention, and pedestrian safety. , 2008, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[7]  David L. Strayer,et al.  Driven to Distraction: Dual-Task Studies of Simulated Driving and Conversing on a Cellular Telephone , 2001, Psychological science.

[8]  C. J. McGrath,et al.  Effect of exchange rate return on volatility spill-over across trading regions , 2012 .

[9]  A T McCartt,et al.  Longer term effects of New York State’s law on drivers’ handheld cell phone use , 2004, Injury Prevention.

[10]  Rik de Groot,et al.  Design manual for bicycle traffic , 2007 .

[11]  Katherine M White,et al.  Dialling and driving: factors influencing intentions to use a mobile phone while driving. , 2008, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[12]  Matthew Witte,et al.  Effect of cellular telephone conversations and other potential interference on reaction time in a braking response. , 2003, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[13]  F.R.H. Zijlstra,et al.  Efficiency in work behaviour: A design approach for modern tools , 1993 .

[14]  A Parkes,et al.  THE INFLUENCE OF THE USE OF MOBILE PHONES ON DRIVER SITUATION AWARENESS , 2001 .

[15]  D. Walton,et al.  Field observations to determine the influence of population size, location and individual factors on pedestrian walking speeds , 2008, Ergonomics.

[16]  S J Westerman,et al.  Mobile (cellular) phone use and driving: a critical review of research methodology , 2001, Ergonomics.

[17]  Michael E Rakauskas,et al.  Effects of naturalistic cell phone conversations on driving performance. , 2004, Journal of safety research.

[18]  R. Tibshirani,et al.  Car phones and car crashes: some popular misconceptions. , 2001, CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne.

[19]  D. Strayer,et al.  Passenger and Cell-Phone Conversations in Simulated Driving , 2004, Journal of experimental psychology. Applied.

[20]  Jeff K Caird,et al.  A meta-analysis of the effects of cell phones on driver performance. , 2008, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[21]  A J McKnight,et al.  The effect of cellular phone use upon driver attention. , 1993, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[22]  Karel Brookhuis,et al.  Analysis of cycling skill : a cognitive approach , 1991 .

[23]  Johan Engström,et al.  Effects of visual and cognitive load in real and simulated motorway driving , 2005 .

[24]  E M Rantanen,et al.  The effect of mental workload on the visual field size and shape. , 1999, Ergonomics.

[25]  Karel Brookhuis,et al.  The feasibility of detecting phone-use related driver distraction , 2001 .

[26]  John Vavrik,et al.  The impact of hands-free message reception/response on driving task performance. , 2003, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[27]  D. Strayer,et al.  Cell phone-induced failures of visual attention during simulated driving. , 2003, Journal of experimental psychology. Applied.