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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday October 05 2017, @03:18PM   Printer-friendly
from the loose-nut-behind-wheel dept.

New vehicle infotainment systems can take drivers' eyes and attention off the road and hands off the wheel for dangerous periods of time, according to new research from the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety. Drivers using in-vehicle technologies like voice-based and touch screen features were visually and mentally distracted for more than 40 seconds when completing tasks like programming navigation or sending a text message. Removing eyes from the road for just two seconds doubles the risk for a crash, according to previous research. With one in three U.S. adults using infotainment systems while driving, AAA cautions that using these technologies while behind the wheel can have dangerous consequences.

AAA has conducted this new research to help automakers and system designers improve the functionality of new infotainment systems and the demand they place on drivers.

"Some in-vehicle technology can create unsafe situations for drivers on the road by increasing the time they spend with their eyes and attention off the road and hands off the wheel," said Dr. David Yang, executive director of the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety. "When an in-vehicle technology is not properly designed, simple tasks for drivers can become complicated and require more effort from drivers to complete."

Does keeping your eyes on the road really matter when traffic is stand-still anyway?


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  • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Friday October 06 2017, @12:41AM

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Friday October 06 2017, @12:41AM (#577732)

    Gone are the day where you could just grab a knob to adjust volume and the heat.
    The menus are deep too. (under which menu did they put the defrost fan on. I can't see a thing! BOOM!)

    Wrong.

    The new Mazdas have a dedicated volume knob (and it mutes if you push it). And the HVAC controls are completely unrelated to the touchscreen system, and use buttons and knobs (the cheap models are all-mechanical, the upscale models are automatic, but use knobs to adjust temperature settings, and buttons for everything else).

    My suggestion: if you're car-shopping and a car has only touchscreen controls, leave. If you buy such a car, then **you are an idiot**, and you have no one to blame for the bad UI but yourself.

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