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Related Experiment Video

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Driving Under the Influence: How Music Listening Affects Driving Behaviors
07:25

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Published on: March 27, 2019

Driving impairs talking.

Ensar Becic1, Gary S Dell, Kathryn Bock

  • 1University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801, USA.

Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
|January 19, 2010
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Driving impairs language skills. Drivers showed reduced accuracy in storytelling and memory recall during simulated driving tasks, indicating a significant cognitive cost to linguistic processing while operating a vehicle.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Human Factors
  • Traffic Safety

Background:

  • Conversation is known to impair driving performance.
  • The reciprocal effect of driving on language processing has been less explored.
  • Understanding dual-task costs is crucial for road safety.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the impact of driving on language production and comprehension.
  • To assess the effect of driving on memory encoding of linguistic information.
  • To examine how driving difficulty affects speech production accuracy.

Main Methods:

  • Ninety-six driver-partner pairs performed a story-retelling task in a driving simulator.
  • A dual-task condition (driving + retelling) was compared to single-task controls.
  • Older adult pairs were included to explore age-related differences.

Main Results:

  • Drivers exhibited decreased accuracy in storytelling and memory recall.
  • Speech production accuracy further declined with increased driving difficulty.
  • Driving performance data indicated drivers prioritized the driving task over conversation.

Conclusions:

  • Driving significantly impairs language production, comprehension, and memory encoding.
  • Cognitive resources are reallocated to driving, leading to degraded linguistic performance.
  • These findings highlight the substantial cognitive load and risks associated with conversing while driving.