Affiliation:
1. West Side Veterans Administration Medical Center and University of Illinois at Chicago Eye Center, Chicago, Illinois
2. New York University Medical Center, New York, New York
3. University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine Eye Center and School of Public Health, Chicago, Illinois
Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine the relative effects of age and compromised vision on driving-related skills and on-road accidents. A total of 107 subjects were tested. They represented four groups that varied in age and visual status, as follows: (1) a younger, normally sighted group; (2) an older, normally sighted group; (3) a younger, visually compromised group; and (4) an older, visually compromised group. Driving performance was assessed by self-reported and state-recorded accident frequency and by an evaluation of performance on an interactive driving simulator. The older groups had poorer driving-related skills, as measured with our interactive driving simulator, than had the younger groups, but they did not have significantly higher on-road accident rates than the younger groups. The older subjects and those with compromised vision had reduced risk-taking scores, as measured with a self-report questionnaire. In addition, all older drivers had increased eye movements and had slower simulator driving speeds, which suggests that behavioral compensation is made for visuocognitive/motor deficits. Regression analyses showed that compromised vision and visual field loss predicted real-world accidents in our study population.
Subject
Behavioral Neuroscience,Applied Psychology,Human Factors and Ergonomics
Cited by
73 articles.
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