Posted: 12:5a.m. IST, August 11, 2012
Wellington, August 11 (ANI): Do you get tempted to read a message while driving?
If the message is in text-speak, you could be at more risk of crashing, a new study has revealed.
The study by Canterbury University PhD student James Head found that reading a text message with text-speak required more focus than correctly spelled words, placing the driver in a state of inattentional blindness and increasing the chance of missing critical signals.
Text-speak refers to words that have been abbreviated, such as ttyl (talk to you later) and includes leaving out vowels.
In the study, 40 participants were made to read a correctly spelled story and a story in text-speak while wearing a vibration belt around their waist. They were asked to identify, as quickly as possible, which side of their body the vibration occurred.
The study found that slower reaction times and fewer correct vibration detections occurred while reading text-speak than while reading a correctly spelled story.
On average, the reaction time of participants was 11 milliseconds slower when reading text-speak.
The researchers felt that text-speak appeared to induce a greater mental workload as the recognition was not as automatic.
The study also noted that if the reader was less familiar with text-speak, additional workload could be needed.
Although our study does not include assessments of driving performance . . . it nevertheless has implications for any tasks combined with reading text-speak, it said. (ANI)