Thursday, 08 June 2017 11:28

Study Reveals Singing Out Loud is Top Activity While Driving

Study Reveals Singing Out Loud is Top Activity While DrivingDAYTONA BEACH, Fla., March 18, 2014 -- Singing out loud is the number one activity while driving, according to a consumer survey from DMEautomotive released in conjunction with National Collision Awareness month. And more dangerous distracted driving activities such as sending/receiving a text, talking on the phone, and eating, rank in the top five activities performed while driving. 

While singing out loud doesn't make distraction.gov's list of distracted driving activities, the rest in the top five do. This is sobering given that in 2012 alone, 3,328 people were killed in distracted-driving crashes.[1] And, according to the DMEa survey, younger drivers are much more likely to be multi-tasking while driving: roughly 9 in 10 admit to engaging in other activities while driving – and they are significantly more likely to be doing every single distracted driving behavior measured in the survey from texting, eating, talking on phone, using email, watching TV, working on laptop, changing clothes and putting on makeup.

The survey also revealed that women are more avid 'car-aokers' than men, and they are also more likely to eat or have a phone conversation while driving. 

The DMEautomotive survey, which was fielded among approximately 2,000 consumers in late 2013, measured activities consumers engaged in while driving in the past month.

"It's not surprising that singing out loud tops our list, but it's deeply disturbing to see how much multiscreen, multi-tasking is going on in cars: people texting, reading emails and the paper, and watching TV. And how a smaller, but considerable, percentage (5-7%) are treating their cars as an extension of their home/bathroom by shaving, brushing or flossing their teeth, putting on makeup or deodorant and changing their clothes while driving," said Dr. Mary Sheridan, Manager of Research and Analytics at DMEa.

Distracted.gov defines distracted driving as any activity that could divert a person's attention away from the primary task of driving.  And, as reported in the Harvard Mental Health Letter: Dr. Michael Miller, editor in chief, says that although people like to think they can multitask, cognitive research suggests that the brain tends to focus on one major activity at a time.[2]

"During National Collision Month, we hope this data will help raise awareness about the ongoing problem of distracted driving, which has been made more complex given the proliferation of phones, tablets and various 'pods' people now regularly use -- and especially among young people, who are the worst offenders," said Sheridan. 

Key Findings:

In addition to the top five activities listed above, consumers are indulging in a broad range of activities, treating the car as extension of their home: between 5-7% shave, brush or floss their teeth, put on makeup or deodorant or change their clothes!

Other Activities Performed while Driving

Take a photo 13%
Read an email 12%
Send an email 9%
Watch TV or movies 7%
Put on make-up 7%
Change clothes 6%
Put on deodorant 6%
Floss your teeth 6%
Work on your laptop 5%
Read a newspaper, book, or magazine 5%
Brush your teeth 5%
Shave 5%

The YOUNG are far more likely to multi-task, and put themselves and others in danger, when driving – across virtually every category. 

Those under 35 are more than twice as likely to read or send a text (46% vs. 19%), and four times as likely to read or send an email (29% vs. 7%). Millennials are multiscreen multi-taskers  - and no surprise –they are bringing that behavior inside the car.  And given that young drivers 18 to 20 report the highest level of phone involvement  (13%) at the time of a crash or near-crash and 16% of all distracted driving crashes involve drivers under 20[3], this is a scary reality.

Women are more likely to sing than men, but men are more likely to email, watch TV, read or work.

"While singing may only present a danger to your fellow passengers' ears, drivers really need to refrain from doing all these other distracting activities while driving, and stay focused on the 'screen ahead' to save their own lives and the lives of others. This month, National Collision Awareness Month, is an excellent time to start," concluded Sheridan.

About DMEautomotive
DMEautomotive (DMEa) is the industry leader in science-based, results-driven automotive marketing, and provides turnkey marketing to the largest and most innovative automotive organizations, from automobile dealerships to many of the largest aftermarket companies in the U.S. DMEa's uniquely panoramic view of the complete automotive sales and service market, combined with its cutting-edge, science-based marketing programs, increases customer yield, conversion and retention.

DMEa does not take marketing performance on faith, and each product and service is measured by a simple, precise scientific approach: Is it true? Prove it. Will it work? Test it. Does it generate results? Show it! Supported by DMEa's proprietary, cloud-based Red Rocket Technology Platform, the DMEa product suite includes science-based, data driven, multi-channel customer acquisition and retention marketing programs; best-in-class campaign reporting; data management and analytics; auto-focused Customer Interaction Center solutions, and complete on-site mail and email fulfillment services. Headquartered in Daytona Beach, Florida, DMEa also has major operations in Jacksonville, Florida. 

[1] http://www.distraction.gov/content/get-the-facts/facts-and-statistics.html.   
[2] http://www.health.harvard.edu/press_releases/why-talking-on-a-cell-phone-distracts-drivers
[3] http://www.distraction.gov/content/get-the-facts/faq.html http://www.distraction.gov/download/811611.pdf 

SOURCE DMEautomotive

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