Why you can't stop checking your phone

To fight texting and driving means confronting a bigger problem, say
experts: our technology is reprogramming us.

By Leon Neyfakh |  GLOBE STAFF     OCTOBER 06, 2013

DRIVE FOR LONG ENOUGH in America, and you're bound to see someone 
texting behind the wheel. Maybe it'll be the guy ahead of you, his 
head bobbing up and down as he tries to balance his attention between 
his screen and his windshield. Or maybe it'll be the woman weaving 
into your lane, thumbing at her phone while she holds it above the 
dashboard. Maybe it'll be you.

A recent study by the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute showed 
that drivers who are texting are twice as likely to crash, or almost 
crash, as those who are focused on the road. It's a disturbingly 
common habit: According to a survey analyzed by the Centers for 
Disease Control and Prevention, nearly one-third of American adults 
had e-mailed or texted on their phones while driving at least once 
during the previous month. And while most get away with it unscathed, 
many do not. The National Safety Council estimates that 213,000 car 
crashes in the United States in 2011 involved drivers who were 
texting, up from 160,000 the year before.

...

http://www.bostonglobe.com/ideas/2013/10/06/why-you-can-stop-checking-your-phone/rrBJzyBGDAr1YlEH5JQDcM/story.html?s_campaign=8315


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