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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. Contemporary society is in such a hurry and has so much to accomplish that getting certain tasks done in a timely fashion has created some dangerous habits for today's drivers. Added to the long-standing list of distractions people have when driving - unruly kids, being late, impatience - drivers routinely eat, apply makeup, read, talk/text on the cell phone, take impairing medications and - believe it or not - consume alcohol while maneuvering a two-thousand-pound vehicle made of piercing metal and glass as well as flammable gasoline. The false sense of security people have when getting behind the wheel is both grand and far-reaching; that it takes but the blink of an eye for an accident to happen speaks to the casual attitude today's drivers have with regard to operational safety. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCDriveHab.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the long-standing list of distractions people have when driving - unruly kids, switching radio channels, impatience - drivers routinely eat, apply makeup, read, watch DVDs, talk/text on the cell phone,
take impairing medications and - believe it or not - consume alcohol while maneuvering a two-thousand-pound vehicle made of piercing metal and glass as well as flammable gasoline. The
false sense of security people have when getting behind the wheel is both grand and far-reaching; that it takes but the blink of an eye for an accident to happen
speaks to the casual attitude todays drivers have with regard to operational safety. As Kolman points out, drivers "multi-tasking behind the wheel has become all too common. The
problem with this, point out safety professionals, is that people overestimate their ability to do a lot of things at the same time" (Kolman 56). Proving to be the most
dangerous drivers on the road, adolescents have raised the bar when it comes to displaying dangerous behavior while behind the wheel. The volatile combination of inexperience, immaturity and believing
they are invincible, teenagers represent one of the most unsafe driving populations on the roads today. The use of cell phones while driving is the primary reason youths have
catapulted themselves to the top of such an unfavorable list, inasmuch as technology has given them too much access to conduct social business while operating a motor vehicle. Data
from University of Utah research indicate how breaking reflexes of those eighteen to twenty-five are markedly decreased when the mind is engaged in phone conversations while driving, a statistic similar
of drivers fifty years their senior. Croal points out how "such distracted drivers braked 18 percent more slowly and took 17 percent more time to resume the same speed
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