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What's that on Your Phone? Effects of Mobile Device Task Type on Pedestrian Performance.

Authors
  • Labonte-LeMoyne, Elise1
  • Cameron, Ann-Frances1
  • Sénécal, Sylvain1
  • Fredette, Marc1
  • Faubert, Jocelyn2
  • Lepore, Franco2
  • Léger, Pierre-Majorique3
  • 1 HEC Montréal, Montreal, Qc, Canada. , (Canada)
  • 2 Université de Montréal, QC, Canada. , (Canada)
  • 3 HEC Montréal, QC, Canada. , (Canada)
Type
Published Article
Journal
Human factors
Publication Date
Apr 01, 2024
Volume
66
Issue
4
Pages
1068–1080
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1177/00187208221141175
PMID: 36426775
Source
Medline
Keywords
Language
English
License
Unknown

Abstract

The number of accidents due to distracted pedestrian is on the rise and many governments and institutions are enacting public policies which restrict texting while walking. However, pedestrians do more than just texting when they use their mobile devices on the go. Exploring pedestrian multitasking, this paper aims to examine the effects of mobile device task type on pedestrian performance outcomes. We performed two studies in lab simulations where 78 participants were asked to perform different tasks on a mobile device (playing a game, reading, writing an email, texting one person, group texting) while performing a pedestrian visual discrimination task while either standing or walking on a treadmill. Behavioral performance as well as neurophysiological data are collected. Results show that compared to a no-phone control, multitasking with any of the tasks on a mobile device leads to poor performance on a pedestrian visual discrimination task. Playing a game is the most cognitively demanding task and leads to the greatest performance degradation. Our studies show that multitasking with a mobile device has the potential to negatively impact pedestrian safety, regardless of task type. However, the impacts of different mobile device tasks are not all equivalent. More research is needed to tease out the different effects of these various tasks and to design mobile applications which effectively and safely capture pedestrians' attention. Public policy, infrastructure, and smart technologies can be used to mitigate the negative effects of mobile multitasking. A more thorough understanding of mobile device task-specific factors at play can help tailor these counter-measures to better aid distracted pedestrians.

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