Welcome to Ready To GO RVing

Tuesday, October 07 2008 @ 07:18 AM EDT

 Dashboard 
Home
RV Information (36/0)

 RV Facts 
  • RV Vacation Costs
  • Free RV Trip Plans
  • RV Links

  •  Camping Articles 
  • Good Sam VIP
  • Summer Camping
  • Spring RV Prep
  • ERS 120x60

     RV Multi-Media 
  • Travel Trailer Construction
  • Pre-Departure Checklist
  • RV Holding Tanks
  • Hitching 5th Wheel
  • Travel Trailer Sway
  • RV Club Fun

  •  RV Safety 
  • RV Cell Phone Use
  • RV Tire Safety
  • RV Accident Prevention

  •  Go RVing! 
    Join the Good Sam Club!
  • Go RVing Alabama
  • Go RVing Alaska
  • Go RVing Arizona
  • Go RVing Arkansas
  • Go RVing California
  • Go RVing Canada
  • Go RVing Colorado
  • Go RVing Connecticut
  • Go RVing Delaware
  • Go RVing Florida
  • Go RVing Georgia
  • Go RVing Idaho
  • Go RVing Illinois
  • Go RVing Indiana
  • Go RVing Iowa
  • Go RVing Kansas
  • Go RVing Kentucky
  • Go RVing Louisiana
  • Go RVing Maine
  • Go RVing Maryland
  • Go RVing Massachusetts
  • Go RVing Michigan
  • Go RVing Minnesota
  • Go RVing Mississippi
  • Go RVing Missouri
  • Go RVing Montana
  • Go RVing Nebraska
  • Go RVing Nevada
  • Go RVing New Hampshire
  • Go RVing New Jersey
  • Go RVing New Mexico
  • Go RVing New York
  • Go RVing North Carolina
  • Go RVing North Dakota
  • Go RVing Ohio
  • Go RVing Oklahoma
  • Go RVing Oregon
  • Go RVing Pennsylvania
  • Go RVing Rhode Island
  • Go RVing South Carolina
  • Go RVing South Dakota
  • Go RVing Tennessee
  • Go RVing Texas
  • Go RVing Utah
  • Go RVing Vermont
  • Go RVing Virginia
  • Go RVing Washington
  • Go RVing West Virginia
  • Go RVing Wisconsin
  • Go RVing Wyoming

     User Functions 
    :

    :

    Don't have an account yet? Sign up as a New User
    Lost your password?


     RV Safety - Cell Phones & Driving Don't Mix   
    Friday, April 20 2007 @ 12:59 PM EDT
    Contributed by: anne
    Views:: 937

    RV InformationMultitasking: You can`t Pay Full Attention to Both Sights and Sounds. The reason talking on a cell phone makes RV (recreational vehicle) drivers less safe may be that the brain can`t simultaneously give full attention to both the visual task of driving and the auditory task of listening, a study by a Johns Hopkins University psychologist suggests.

    **For RV products that promote safety in your recreational vehicle, visit this page: MobileAwareness.com

    The study, published in a recent issue of "The Journal of Neuroscience," reinforces earlier behavioral research on the danger of mixing mobile phones and motoring.

    "Our research helps explain why talking on a cell phone can impair driving performance, even when the driver is using a hands-free device," said Steven Yantis, a professor in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences in the university`s Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and Sciences.

    "The reason?" he said. "Directing attention to listening effectively `turns down the volume` on input to the visual parts of the brain. The evidence we have right now strongly suggests that attention is strictly limited -- a zero-sum game. When attention is deployed to one modality -- say, in this case, talking on a cell phone -- it necessarily extracts a cost on another modality -- in this case, the visual task of driving."

    Yantis`s chief collaborator on this research project was Sarah Shomstein, who was a doctoral candidate at Johns Hopkins. Shomstein is now a post-doctoral fellow at Carnegie-Mellon University.

    Though the results of Yantis` research can be applied to the real world problem of drivers and their cell phones, that was not directly what the professor and his team studied. Instead, healthy young adults ages 19 to 35 were brought into a neuroimaging lab and asked to view a computer display while listening to voices over headphones. They watched a rapidly changing display of multiple letters and digits, while listening to three voices speaking letters and digits at the same time. The purpose was to simulate the cluttered visual and auditory input people deal with every day.

    Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), Yantis and his team recorded brain activity during each of these tasks. They found that when the subjects directed their attention to visual tasks, the auditory parts of their brain recorded decreased activity, and vice versa.

    Yantis` team also examined the parts of the brain that control shifts of attention. They discovered that when a person was instructed to move his attention from vision to hearing, for instance, the brain`s parietal cortex and the prefrontal cortex produced a burst of activity that the researchers interpreted as a signal to initiate the shift of attention. This surprised them, because it has previously been thought that those parts of the brain were involved only in visual functions.

    "Ultimately, we want to understand the connection between voluntary acts of the will (for instance, a choice to shift attention from vision to hearing), changes in brain activity (reflecting both the initiation of cognitive control and the effects of that control), and resultant changes in the performance of a task, such as driving," Yantis said. "By advancing our understanding of the connection between mind, brain and behavior, this research may help in the design of complex devices – such as airliner cockpits – and may help in the diagnosis and treatment of neurological disorders such as ADHD or schizophrenia."

    This type of work also informs debates about the safety of mobile phone use while driving. It suggests that when attention is focused on listening, vision is affected even at very early stages of visual perception. A paper describing the research appeared in the Nov. 24, 2004, issue of the Journal of Neuroscience (10702-10706).

    Steven Yantis: http://www.psy.jhu.edu/fs/faculty/yantis.htm The National Institute on Drug Abuse funded this research

    Search more for this topic under: recreational vehicle safety, cell phones and recreational vehicles, recreational vehicle cell phone safety. Many more safety and mobile awareness products are available to help make your RV experience stress-free. Visit MobileAwareness.com

    For RV products that promote safety in your recreational vehicle, visit this page: MobileAwareness.com






     What's Related 
  • MobileAwareness.com
  • MobileAwareness.com
  • MobileAwareness.com
  • More by anne
  • More from RV Information

  •  Story Options 
  • Mail Story to a Friend
  • Printable Story Format


  • Copyright © 2006/2007

    Designs by: All Merchant Services 
    Created this page in 0.14 seconds 

    If you've found this web site, you are seeking more than just statistics and figures about the RV lifestyle... you are "ready to go RVing," and we're here to help.  This special community for new RVers is a unique RVing web site.  It's a collection of articles to teach you to go rving, rv information, rv trips, rv planning, rv clubs, rv articles, rv how-to, rv tips, camping information, campgrounds, rv parks, camping clubs, new rvers, ready to go rvinga place to meet other RVers, a place to learn about RVing, and receive feedback for your questions - from other folks just like you - who love the RV lifestyle.