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Driver distraction and inattention : advances in research and countermeasures, volume 1 redaktör: Regan, Michael A ; redaktör: Lee, John D ; redaktör: Victor, Trent W

By: Contributor(s): Series: Human factors in road and rail transportPublication details: Farnham Ashgate, 2013Description: 440 sISBN:
  • 9781409425854
Subject(s): Bibl.nr: VTI 2014.0035Location: Notes: Some of the chapters in the book derive from papers presented at the First International Conference on Driver Distraction and Inattention ... : (DDI 2009), held September 28-29, 2009 in Gothenburg, Sweden. Abstract: It is estimated that, in the United States, around 20 percent of all police-reported road crashes involve driver distraction as a contributing factor. This figure increases if other forms of inattention are considered. Evidence (reviewed in this volume) suggests that the situation is similar in other countries and that driver distraction and inattention are even more dangerous as contributing factors in crashes than drug and alcohol intoxication. Having a solid evidence-base from which to develop injury countermeasures is a cornerstone of road-safety management. This book adds to the accumulating evidence-base on driver distraction and inattention. With 24 chapters by 52 authors from more than 10 countries, it provides important new perspectives on the definition and meaning of driver distraction and inattention, the mechanisms that characterize them, the measurement of their effects, strategies for mitigating their effects, and recommendations for further research.
Item type: Reports, conferences, monographs
Holdings
Current library Status
Statens väg- och transportforskningsinstitut Available

Some of the chapters in the book derive from papers presented at the First International Conference on Driver Distraction and Inattention ... : (DDI 2009), held September 28-29, 2009 in Gothenburg, Sweden.

It is estimated that, in the United States, around 20 percent of all police-reported road crashes involve driver distraction as a contributing factor. This figure increases if other forms of inattention are considered. Evidence (reviewed in this volume) suggests that the situation is similar in other countries and that driver distraction and inattention are even more dangerous as contributing factors in crashes than drug and alcohol intoxication. Having a solid evidence-base from which to develop injury countermeasures is a cornerstone of road-safety management. This book adds to the accumulating evidence-base on driver distraction and inattention. With 24 chapters by 52 authors from more than 10 countries, it provides important new perspectives on the definition and meaning of driver distraction and inattention, the mechanisms that characterize them, the measurement of their effects, strategies for mitigating their effects, and recommendations for further research.