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Distracted Driving Research Paper

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Teen drivers get more distracted behind the wheel than adults, right? Since adults are older and more mature than teenagers, they must drive more carefully, right? These stereotypes are wrong. Multiple studies and lots of research show that adults are worse than teenagers when it comes to driving distracted. Adults are more distracted by technology behind the wheel than teens. Almost half of all adults (forty-seven percent) admit to texting and driving in a survey by AT&T. Only thirty-four percent of teenagers ages sixteen to seventeen say they have texted while driving. This is a thirteen percent difference between adults and teens. Also, when it comes to talking on the phone while driving, adults do that more than teens too. Seventy-five percent of adults have talked on the phone while driving and fifty-two percent of teenagers have talked on the phone while driving. This is a twenty-three percent difference. (Madden, Mary, and Lee Rainie). Ninety-eight percent of adults know that distracted driving is not safe, but the trend is still on the rise. (Tsukayama, Hayley). …show more content…

Teen’s text. But you’re looking at around ten million teen drivers, but around about 180 million other adult drivers.” Texting while driving is considered the most dangerous form of distraction because it engages the eyes, the hands, and the mind. Also, receiving or sending a text message takes a driver’s eyes off the road for an average of four point six seconds- which is about as long as it takes to drive the length of a football field going fifty-five miles per hour. Not to mention, texting while driving makes a crash risk twenty-three times worse than driving while not distracted. (Copel, Larry, and Robert W. Ahrens) Texting is not the only form of distraction; web browsing, video watching, picture taking, and gaming can distract a driver as well. (Madden, Mary, and Lee

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