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DDSA Testifies at NHTSA Hearing on In-Vehicle Electronics

The Distracted Driving Safety Alliance (DDSA) was invited to testify by the National Highway Safety Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) at today’s hearing on in-vehicle electronics and driver distractions. Here is the DDSA’s testimony, applauding NHTSA for its attention to a very important issue – distracted driving – but urging it to allow high-tech innovators and manufacturers the latitude to continue creating a safer driving environment by avoiding unnecessary regulation.

 

Testimony of

The Distracted Driving Safety Alliance

Before

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s Hearing on

Visual-Manual Driver Distraction Guidelines

For In-Vehicle Electronic Devices

Marc-Anthony Signorino, General Counsel – Distracted Driving Safety Alliance

March 12, 2012

 

I want to thank you for inviting the Distracted Driving Safety Alliance (DDSA) to testify this morning. First off, I’d like to extend our congratulations and appreciation to Secretary LaHood, Administrator Strickland, Associate Administrator Susan Gorcowski, Kristin Kingsley and the entire NHTSA staff for their steadfast commitment to increasing driver safety, as well as their work in putting together this hearing. We are very supportive of this process and will continue to help in any way possible.

Administrator Strickland, I also bring you warm greetings from the DDSA’s partner in youth education, Zac Ziebarth, Director of Curb Distracting Driving. He asked me to say hello, and to tell you you’re always welcome to come to Arizona State University to talk about the dangers of distracted driving.

The DDSA’s mission is to be the voice of a broad cross-section of industries committed to ending distracted driving. The DDSA is committed to working with stakeholders from all sectors – industry, government, labor, advocacy groups and consumers – to bring an end to distracted driving. In doing so, we reaffirm that distracted driving is a behavioral issue and that education, best practices, and technology are all valuable solutions in changing peoples’ driving behaviors to eliminate deadly distractions. The DDSA’s activities are centered on the following core beliefs:

  • Technology can be a valuable solution to the problem of distracted driving;
  • Government, industry and consumers all share a responsibility to curb distracted driving in a responsible manner that stops bad behavior without banning innovation; and
  • Engaging and educating young people about the dangers of distracted driving early on will set the tone for a safer future. As such our educational program, Curb Distracted Driving, with which you are familiar, is poised to encourage thousands of new and future drivers on their roles in safer driving.

I’m certain you’ll hear ample evidence from scholars, statisticians, and manufacturers on the science behind the development of the guidelines. Our comments are aimed specifically at the policies surrounding this effort. As such, we have a number of comments and recommendations for NHTSA to consider as it moves forward not only with the first phase of guideline development, but with the process as a whole.

We applaud NHTSA’s recognition that the state of the art in technology is constantly changing, and that voluntary guidelines, as opposed to a regulatory approach, is the most appropriate method to address the dilemma of distracted driving given the complexity of the issue. The technologies we’re looking at today are more than likely going to look drastically different tomorrow.

We also commend NHTSA’s commitment to put real science behind these guidelines, as opposed to anecdotal evidence. That said, the field of scholarship in cognitive distraction is increasing, and NHTSA is correct in its mission to encourage and listen to this scholarship. While there are a number of studies on driving behavior and cognitive load, much research is still needed as the issue is very much a moving target. For instance, the current pool of new and novice drivers are digital natives, and as such will have over time a much different relationship with technology than today’s veteran drivers.

NHTSA is to be applauded for basing the proposed guidelines on those developed by the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers as a starting point; the industry has already put much thought and effort into developing best practices, and building upon that strong foundation is an earmark of good government. The consideration of both the European and JAMA guidelines is also very welcome.

Given the convergence in technology we’re seeing, with multiple industries coming together to enhance the driving experience by increasing both safety and convenience, it’s inevitable that innovation will outpace the policy process. We encourage NHTSA to consider the voluntary guideline process as the optimal approach to address the issue of reducing driver distractions, revisiting the guidelines regularly to accommodate new innovations and trends that help or hinder the driving experience.

We do have recommendations, however, to ensure the guideline development process takes into consideration the complexities that arise when many disparate industries – autos, software, communications, network managers, handheld devices, and other manufacturers – work together to create a complex, integrated product as evidenced by today’s cars.

It’s understandable that NHTSA attempt to address the issue in bite-sized pieces – first OEM equipment with visual-manual driver interfaces, then portable and after-market devices, and then auditory-vocal interfaces.

We urge NHTSA to understand that as all three of these elements are becoming increasingly intertwined, the policies and guidelines we develop must take this into account. These guidelines are expected to impact future vehicle design.  To effectively accomplish the goal of phase one, visual-manual, it is imperative we consider how the use of both portable devices and auditory-vocal interfaces are integrated with visual-manual systems now and not at some later date during phase two or three.

The technologies in all three phases are becoming interdependent and will soon be indistinguishable from each other. While expediency is critical, we need to project where driving technology is going not five years out, but one year out. As innovation evolves so fast, today’s problems will tomorrow be moot.

For instance, voice today plays a critical role in allowing drivers to engage in secondary tasks, and development is ongoing to allow it a role in primary driving tasks surrounding safety. The manual-visual guidelines must consider how voice will be integrated when they are developed.

Also, internet connectivity in cars is increasingly common, and that connectivity will be achieved through the driver’s cell phone. As an example, with the touch of one button and just my voice, I can ask my phone to find me good barbecue via Yelp, make a reservation on Open Table and send invites to my friends, all coordinated on my calendar via Outlook. That’s coming to your car very soon – and that’s a good thing. Any activity we can move off a solely hand-held platform and into an integrated, voice-activated application will be one step closer to a safer driving experience.

Because of this, we strongly recommend NHTSA includes in its phase-one guidelines that voice-activated capabilities be a standard feature in all cars by 2015, and that all manual-visual inputs be supported by voice-activated capabilities soon thereafter. 

There are many benefits to this approach.  First and foremost, you’re eliminating unnecessary manual-visual tasks. This will also promote the use of non-manual-visual secondary tasks.  By introducing voice at its most basic level within the automobile, consumers will be further accustomed to performing other tasks by voice that they’d otherwise perform manually – including phone use, navigation input, comfort controls and music selection.

Another recommendation we have recognizes the growing prevalence for mobile applications that create an additional safety layer in the vehicle by performing voluntary lock-out services – where a parent or a fleet manager can hand their kid or employee a cell phone that locks out all but emergency calls when it senses it’s moving faster than 5 mph.

Because of this, we also recommend that NHTSA includes in its phase-one guidelines the allowance of voluntary lock-out applications, whether via mobile application or third-party hardware device, to interface with in-vehicle electronic devices.

As a last point, we ask NHTSA consider the Law of Unintended Consequences. For instance, the DDSA is completely supportive of restrictions that prohibit the use of visual-manual text messaging, as well as internet and social media browsing while the vehicle is in motion. It just makes sense. However, the guidelines also prohibit the inputting of specific addresses for navigation, as well as 10-digit phone dialing while in motion. That makes sense, too. Yet, without an integrated voice-activated control system included in the in-vehicle technology package, we have strong concerns that drivers will simply turn to their cell phones or tablet devices for navigation or 10-digit phone dialing.

Additionally, the latter two actions can safely be performed by someone sitting in the passenger seat – without forcing a driver to exit a highway or toll-road to accomplish such a task. The guidelines acknowledge this dilemma, but mandates a lock-out.  A flat out ban in the guidelines will discourage innovators from developing a workable solution, and encourage drivers to find ‘work arounds,’ such as resorting to their mobile device while the car is in motion.

These are not the results anyone here wants.  We urge flexibility in guideline development that can allow for appropriate technology solutions to such dilemmas – in this case one that allows the driver to be locked-out of these tasks, but accommodates passenger input.

In conclusion, the DDSA commends NHTSA for its foresight and flexibility in developing these guidelines based on, and in conjunction with, industry best-practices – and urges continued flexibility to allow for the lightning speed of innovation. As such, we urge NHTSA as it moves forward with the first phase of its guideline development to include voice-activated systems and the integration of third-party safety options.

Thank you. We’re looking forward to submitting our written comments.  I’m happy to answer any questions you may have.

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DDSA Comments on NTSB Appeal for Nationwide Cell Phone Ban for Drivers

DDSA Calls For Nationwide Ban on Hand-Held Texting While Driving But Opposes Bans on Technology

WASHINGTON, D.C, Dec. 14, 2011 – The Distracted Driving Safety Alliance (DDSA) General Counsel Marc-Anthony Signorino issued the following statement commenting on the National Traffic Safety Board’s (NTSB) recommendation for a nationwide ban on the use of cell phones and text messaging devices while driving.

The NTSB’s recommendation to ban the non-emergency use of portable electronic devices for all drivers will unnecessarily harm interstate commerce, technology manufacturers, and consumers writ large. While the events that led to the Gray Summit, Missouri collision on August 5, 2010 are tragic, the NTSB’s recommendations are overbroad in scope and overreaching in application as we attempt to address the problem of making our nation’s roads a safer driving environment for all Americans.

The DDSA encourages lawmakers to address the bad behaviors that lead to distracted driving, such as cellphone use without a hands-free device and texting. We also encourage the use of technology solutions to make the driving experience safer, such as software applications that lock-out texting abilities while driving or speech-recognition systems that reduce driver distraction. However, a nationwide ban on the use of technology is not the answer, as it would not only preclude innovative safer driving solutions, but it would create inordinate hardships for businesses, workers and parents who need to stay connected.

A far better approach to the problem is Congress’ efforts to reduce distracted driving as seen in the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Reauthorization bill, currently in the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee. By offering grants to states that enact and enforce reasonable prohibitions on texting and driving, as well as prohibitions on youth use of cell phones while driving, the bill focuses on addressing the unsafe behaviors that put all drivers at risk. We also applaud the use of grants to promote teen traffic safety programs and the reasonable prohibition on electronic visual entertainment screens in the driver’s view.

Government, industry and consumers all share a responsibility to curb distracted driving in a manner that stops bad behavior without impeding innovation. Educating drivers  – both novice and veteran alike – is a key element to having drivers understand the dangers of distracted driving and accept the responsibility of reducing all distracting behaviors while behind the wheel, whether it be eating, texting, operating a radio, talking with friends, dealing with the children, or making a call without using a hands-free device.

We look forward to working with the NTSB, the Department of Transportation and Congress to ensure that the right combination of regulations and consumer-oriented principles are adopted to help spur innovative technologies that can help make our roads a safer place for all Americans.

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For more information, contact Anne DiGiulio (202) 464-4000

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Open-Eyed Blindness: Paying Attention To What’s On the Road.

Can we comprehend all that we see?  A recent study published in the journal i-Perception confronts this very question.  Union College psychology professor and study author Chris Chabris,, strapped video cameras to volunteers, told them to run after a test-subject jogger and remember what they saw during the chase.  What sounds like a giddy experiment turned out to be a revealing study.

Reported on by NPR’s Morning Edition, Chabris’ inspiration came from an unlikely source – a Boston police officer who, while chasing a suspect, ran past a brutal assault and was prosecuted for perjury when he claimed not to have seen it.Charbris’  look  into inattentional blindness, the failure to see visible and otherwise salient events when paying attention to something else, has profound implications not only in eyewitness testimony, but in everyday occurrences like driving.  In Charbis’ experiment, he found that only 35% of the subjects noticed a fight taking place as they ran toward the jogger.  That same inattentional blindness exists when driving distracted. Blind from seeing the consequences, drivers fail to realize that the multi-tasking-capable mind is not meant to multi-task under the high-risk conditions of driving.  As the study purports, at any given time, our working memory is limited to the amount of information it can hold and the number of operations it can hold.  In a nutshell, we have a limited cognitive load. The bad behaviors of pushing that cognitive load to its limit by texting, talking on a hands-free device, eating, or doing anything else while driving – but driving – has to stop. Understanding what’s happening on the road only 35% of the time is not what anyone can call responsible driving.

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Creating Foolproof Safe Driving Technology? Don’t Underestimate the Fools.

An article in USA Today reported yesterday National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) Administrator David Strickland’s  comments at this year’s Telematics Detroit Conference 2011, noting his dismissal of Google’s new driverless car as not ready to protect Americans from the dangers of distracted driving, as it wasn’t “foolproof.” While being foolproof isn’t usually a criterion for most technologies coming to market, we agree with Strickland that, when it comes to that two-ton weapon also known as the family car, safety devices should certainly aim for foolproof. But just as more distractions arise, technology will evolve to help us deal with them. In Google’s case, I hope we don’t allow the perfect to be the enemy of the holy-cow-this-is-freakin’-awesome. Advances like these only come about when really smart people decide to solve major societal problems; fluffing off their efforts sends a discouraging message to innovators who want to make a better world.

This does give rise to a larger discussion of the evolution of the automobile as an Internet-capable mobile platform.  Strickland got it right when he said that “it’s OK to not be connected when you’re operating a car.” We can all agree that some things can wait. Personally, I can’t imagine a text worth flipping my car for, and I don’t recall Twitter showing up on Maslow’s hierarchy.

Despite the Administrator’s later remark that “a car is not a mobile device,” it’s clear that’s where it’s headed. The Dutch government is working right now on a project called Strategic Platform for Intelligent Transport Systems, otherwise known by its unfortunate acronym (*ahem*) SPITS. Designed to address traffic management and safety by utilizing open standard in-car platforms and downloadable services, SPITS is paving the way for interesting applications, such as cooperative driving where cars platoon together, maintain safe distances, and establish the optimal speed for road conditions. Mobile technology will allow new navigation where information from infrastructure prepares drivers for traffic incidents down the road, and deliver other map-related updates wirelessly and instantly to the vehicle as you are driving. There’s also the concept of pay-as-you-drive insurance that charges you based on your miles and driving habits.

So if technology is not the problem but the solution, then what is the problem? To paraphrase Caesar, the fault, dear Reader, lies not in our iPhones, but in ourselves.

Technology helps, and mobile technologies will help us become safer drivers, especially as they evolve. The critical component here is our responsibility to change our own relationship with technology when it comes to getting rid of distracting behaviors rather than eliminating technology altogether.

The most efficient way to help solve this problem is collaboration between innovators and regulators, like NHTSA and DoT.  It’s gratifying to see Administrator Strickland and DoT Secretary Ray LaHood recognize and address the growing issue of distracted driving.  On the same token, it’s welcoming to see industry like Google create innovating technology.  Industry, technology, and government are going to play a vital role in saving lives and having a positive influence on the future, but only if we cooperate.

In the meantime, drivers can play a major role in curbing distracted driving through educating themselves on getting rid of the distractions.  It’s an education that doesn’t require schooling, a degree, a test, or a certification.  It’s an education that starts with a commitment and then a realization of how devastating the problem actually is.  It’s an education that saves lives.

Let’s not get caught up in attempting to eliminate technology.  Let’s use those efforts to eliminate bad behaviors through education, and hopefully in the process, help us all act less like fools.

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Legislation vs. Education: Where will the issue be solved?

Since the issue of distracted driving first caught the public’s eye, there have been many different opinions on whether legislation will create prevention. As I looked at the recent news yesterday on distracted driving I found that the research and facts are mixed as well. A Seattle Times article titled “Year-old cellphone law drives home point about distracted driving,” was followed by an article about a recent Temple University research study that was titled, “Distracted driving data and laws to prevent it don’t match up.” These articles lend a good explanation as to why opinions are mixed on the issue of what’s the right approach.

After talking with many teenage drivers over the past few months, I can say that there are definitely pros and cons to legislation, and the students have given me prime examples. When I was at a small school in Wisconsin talking to students about the new legislation on texting and driving in the state, I asked a new teenage driver his opinion of the law. He merely grimaced at the question and explained that if he holds his phone down below the window, he will be in the clear as his distracted action would not be visible by a police officer. I then asked another teenage driver her opinion of the new law. She replied back explaining a law is a law and that law will be carried out by the majority of the people because they fear the consequence. From the young man who is now driving with one hand on the wheel and the other on the floorboards texting to the young girl carrying out the law, you can see the range of negative and positive actions being taken.

That leaves me with one clear conclusion. One of the main things that can be done to make roads safer and prevent distracted driving is to supplement strong legislation with enhanced, on-going distracted driving education. For most of us, laws are enough to get us to change our behavior. Unfortunately, there are going to be people out there that just don’t get it. It’s obvious that if we’re to solve the problem, we have got to do more than just pass a bill and think the problem’s solved. On the same note, relying on education alone also isn’t enough. As far as we’re concerned, it’s not an either/or proposition: strong laws are necessary, but we must also begin to educate today to save lives tomorrow.

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Welcome to our new guest blogger, Zac Ziebarth of Curb Distracted Driving.

We at the DDSA want to welcome Zac Ziebarth, of Curb Distracted Driving fame, as our new guest blogger. A few years ago, Zac started CDD to help get the message out to new drivers of the dangers of distracted driving, and he’s been doing an amazing job.

Zac has agreed to lend us his point of view on this critically important issue, helping us to understand how new drivers (and those who aspire to be new drivers) look at distracted driving, and how we can best reach them.

Please join us as we welcome Zac – we’re looking forward to seeing great things!

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DoT FY’12 Budget Testimony – $330M for Distracted Driving

The Dept. of Transportation released Sec. Ray LaHood’s March 10, 2011 testimony before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing, and Urban Development today. Notably, out of the entire $129 billion budget for FY2012 in the the Administration’s Surface Transportation Reauthorization proposal, $330 million is directed for the ongoing campaign against America’s distracted driving epidemic. Click here for the speech.

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Our Inaugural Post

Welcome to the Distracted Driving Safety Alliance Policy Blog. This is where you can come to find news and commentary on the on-going problem of distracted driving. Join us as we take up a number of important issues, such as how to define the problem, what it means to our children, and how to best marshal the combined innovative talents of all though leaders in solving this very real problem.

The mission of the Alliance is to be the voice of the broad cross-section of industries committed to ending distracted driving, working with stakeholders from all sectors – industry, labor, government, advocacy groups and consumers – to bring an end to distracted driving.

The Alliance’s goal is to inform legislators, regulators, the media, policy influencers and the public about the dangers of distracted driving and how key industry leaders are working to solve the problem through innovation, education and outreach. Distracted driving is a behavioral issue and not a technology problem; in fact, technology can be a valuable solution in solving the problem. The key to the issue, however, is reaching the person behind the steering wheel and reinforcing the message that focused driving means responsible driving.

We’ll be joined by guest writers from time to time here on the blog, people well versed and committed to the problem of curbing distracted driving.  We’re looking forward to hearing your comments and thoughts, too.  If you’d like to participate in the effort, please let me know – the more voices we have adding to the discussion, the faster we can can put an end to a truly bad behavior and make our roads safer for all.

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Prez: December is National Impaired Driving Month

Oyez, Oyez, Oyez.

Great news from the Administration: December is once again National Impaired Driving Month.  Announced in a Presidential Proclaimation, President Obama added distracted driving to the list of holiday dangers (the others being drunk driving and drugged driving), an initiative that we can all support.  Quoth the President:

This National Impaired Driving Prevention Month, we must also draw attention to the dangers of distracted driving, including using electronic equipment or texting while behind the wheel of a vehicle.  When people take their attention away from the road to answer a call, respond to a message, or use a device, they put themselves and others at risk.  Distracted driving is a serious, life threatening practice, and I encourage everyone to visit Distraction.gov to learn how to prevent distracted driving.

This holiday season, the Distracted Driving Safety Alliance encourages everybody to use their electronic devices in a responsible manner to help put an end to distracted driving.

For more information, check out the entire proclaimation at the White House website.

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