Print Email Facebook Twitter The impact of road traffic context on secondary task engagement while driving Title The impact of road traffic context on secondary task engagement while driving Author Cuentas-Hernandez, Sandra (Queensland University of Technology) Li, Xiaomeng (Queensland University of Technology) King, Mark J. (Queensland University of Technology) Oviedo-Trespalacios, O. (TU Delft Values Technology and Innovation; TU Delft Safety and Security Science; Queensland University of Technology) Department Values Technology and Innovation Date 2023 Abstract Introduction: Driver distraction has been recognized for a long time as a significant road safety issue. It has been consistently reported that drivers spend considerable time engaged in activities that are secondary to the driving task. The temporary diversion of attention from safety-critical driving tasks has often been associated with various adverse driving outcomes, from minor driving errors to serious motor vehicle crashes. This study explores the role of the driving context on a driver’s decision to engage in secondary activities non-critical to the driving task. Method: The study utilises the Naturalistic Engagement in Secondary Tasks (NEST) dataset, a complementary dataset derived from the SHRP2 naturalistic dataset, the most extensive naturalistic study to date. An initial exploratory analysis is conducted to identify patterns of secondary task engagements in relation to context variables. Maximum likelihood Chi-square tests were applied to test for differences in engagement between types of driver distraction for the selected contextual variables. Pearson residual graphs were employed as a supplementary method to visually depict the residuals that constitute the chi-square statistic.Lastly, a two-step cluster analysis was conducted to identify common execution scenarios among secondary tasks. Results: The exploratory analysis revealed interesting behavioral trends among drivers, with higher engagement rates in left curves compared to right curves, while driving uphill compared to driving downhill, in low-density traffic scenarios compared to high-density traffic scenarios, and during afternoon periods compared to morning periods. Significant differences in engagement were found among secondary tasks in relation to locality, speed, and roadway design. The clustering analysis showed no significant associations between driving scenarios of similar characteristics and the type of secondary activity executed. Discussion: Overall, the findings confirm that the road traffic environment can influence how car drivers engage in distracted driving behavior. Subject attentiondriver distractionhuman factorsmultitaskrisky behavior To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:a55611cf-1ebc-4190-a456-4d1795db078f DOI https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1139373 ISSN 1664-1078 Source Frontiers in Psychology, 14 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2023 Sandra Cuentas-Hernandez, Xiaomeng Li, Mark J. King, O. Oviedo-Trespalacios Files PDF fpsyg_14_1139373.pdf 2.42 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:a55611cf-1ebc-4190-a456-4d1795db078f/datastream/OBJ/view