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Journal Article

Citation

Horswill MS, Plooy AM. Perception 2008; 37(7): 1037-1043.

Affiliation

School of Psychology, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Brisbane, Australia. m.horswill@psy.uq.edu.au

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, SAGE Publications)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

18773726

Abstract

Reducing the level of internal noise is seen as a goal when designing modern cars. One danger of such a philosophy is that one is systematically attempting to alter one of the cues that can be used by drivers to estimate speed and this could bias speed judgments and driving behaviour. Seven participants were presented with pairs of video-based driving scenes and asked to judge whether the second scene appeared faster or slower than the first (2-alternative forced-choice task using the method of constant stimuli). They either heard in-car noise at the level it occurred in the real world or reduced in volume by 5 dB. The reduction in noise led to participants judging speeds to be significantly slower and this effect was evident for all participants. This finding indicates that, when in-car noise is attenuated, drivers are likely to underestimate their speed, potentially encouraging them to drive faster and placing them at greater risk of crashing.


Language: en

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