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Journal Article

Citation

Ledbetter JL, Boyce MW, Fekety DK, Sawyer B, Smither JA. Work 2012; 41(Suppl 1): 5384-5385.

Affiliation

Applied Experimental and Human Factors Psychology, University of Central Florida, 4000 Central Florida Blvd., Orlando, FL, U.S.A.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, IOS Press)

DOI

10.3233/WOR-2012-0826-5384

PMID

22317558

Abstract

This poster presents a study to assess one's ability to detect motorcycles under different conditions of conspicuity while performing a secondary visual load task. Previous research in which participants were required to detect motorcycles revealed differences in age (young adults/older adult) as well as differences associated with motorcycle conspicuity conditions. Past research has specifically found motorcycles with headlights ON and modulating headlights (flashing) to be more conspicuous than motorcycles with headlights OFF within traffic conditions [1]. The present study seeks to provide more information on the effects of multitasking on motorcycle conspicuity and safety. The current study seeks to determine the degree to which multitasking limits the conspicuity of a motorcycle within traffic. We expect our results will indicate main effects for distraction task, age, gender, motorcycle lighting conditions, and vehicular DRLs on one's ability to effectively detect a motorcycle. The results have implications for motorcycle safety in general and through this research, a better understanding of motorcycle conspicuity can be established so as to minimize the risk involved with motorcycle operation.


Keywords: Driver distraction;


Language: en

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