For almost 20 years, it has been a wide-held belief that talking on a cellphone while driving is dangerous and leads to more accidents. However, new research from Carnegie Mellon University and the London School of Economics and Political Science suggests that talking on a cellphone while driving does not increase crash risk. Published in the American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, the study uses data from a major cellphone provider and accident reports to contradict previous findings that connected cellphone use to increased crash risk. Such findings include the
influential1 1997 paper in the New England Journal of Medicine, which concluded that cellphone use by drivers increased crash risk by a factor of 4.3 -- effectively
equating2 its danger to that of
illicit3(违法的) levels of alcohol. The findings also raise doubts about the traditional cost-benefit analyses used by states that have, or are,
implementing4 cellphone-driving bans as a way to promote safety.
"Using a cellphone while driving may be distracting, but it does not lead to higher crash risk in the setting we examined," said Saurabh Bhargava, assistant professor of social and decision sciences in CMU's Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences. "While our findings may strike many as counterintuitive, our results are precise enough to
statistically5 call into question the effects typically found in the academic literature. Our study differs from most prior work in that it
leverages6(利用) a naturally occurring experiment in a real-world context."
For the study, Bhargava and the London School of Economics and Political Science's Vikram S. Pathania examined calling and crash data from 2002 to 2005, a period when most cellphone carriers offered pricing plans with free calls on weekdays after 9 p.m. Identifying drivers as those whose cellphone calls were routed through multiple
cellular7 towers, they first showed that drivers increased call volume by more than 7 percent at 9 p.m. They then compared the relative crash rate before and after 9 p.m. using data on approximately 8 million crashes across nine states and all fatal crashes across the nation. They found that the increased cellphone use by drivers at 9 p.m. had no corresponding effect on crash rates.
Additionally, the researchers
analyzed9 the effects of legislation banning cellphone use,
enacted10 in several states, and similarly found that the legislation had no effect on the crash rate.
"One thought is that drivers may
compensate11 for the
distraction12 of cellphone use by selectively deciding when to make a call or consciously driving more carefully during a call," Bhargava said. "This is one of a few explanations that could explain why laboratory studies have shown different results. The implications for policymakers considering bans depend on what is actually driving this lack of an effect. For example, if drivers do compensate for distraction, then
penalizing13 cellphone use as a secondary rather than a primary
offense14 could make sense. In the least, this study and others like it, suggest we should revisit the
presumption15 that talking on a cellphone while driving is as dangerous as widely perceived."
Pathania, a fellow in the London School of Economics Managerial Economics and Strategy group, added a cautionary note. "Our study focused
solely16 on talking on one's cellphone. We did not, for example,
analyze8 the effects of texting or Internet
browsing17, which has become much more popular in recent years. It is certainly possible that these activities pose a real hazard."