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Children face speed challenge

UK study reveals children cannot accurately judge speed of vehicles travelling faster than 30km/h, reveals study.
(Image: Kate Jewell, via Wikimedia Commons)
(Image: Kate Jewell, via Wikimedia Commons)

New research published yesterday, 23 November, in the UK, reveals primary school children cannot accurately judge the speed of vehicles travelling faster than 30/kmh. With the holidays coming soon in South Africa, it's as well for parents to be aware of these findings, and try to instil into their children greater road sense.

A study by researchers at Royal Holloway, University of London reveals that primary school children cannot accurately judge the speed of vehicles travelling faster than 30km/h.

The researchers measured the perceptual acuity of more than 100 children in primary schools, and calculated the speed of approach that they could reliably detect. The results suggest that while adult pedestrians can make accurate judgments for vehicles travelling up to 80km/h, children of primary school age become unreliable once the approach speed goes above 30km/h, if the car is five seconds away. Professor John Wann, from the Department of Psychology at Royal Holloway, who led the research, says: "This is not a matter of children not paying attention, but a problem related to low-level visual detection mechanisms, so even when children are paying very close attention they may fail to detect a fast approaching vehicle."

Virtual reality to enhance road sense?

The researchers are now looking at the potential for using virtual reality systems to make children more aware of the errors that may occur, but Professor Wann stresses that the simplest solution lies in traffic regulation. "These findings provide strong evidence that children may make risky crossing judgements when vehicles are travelling at 50 or 60km/h and in addition the vehicles that they are more likely to step in front of are the faster vehicles that are more likely to result in a fatality.

"Travelling one and a half kilometres through a residential area at 30km/h versus 45km/h will only add 60 seconds to your journey time - we encourage drivers to take a minute and save a child's life."

Brain imaging research

The study, which is published in the international journal Psychological Science, is part of a larger project sponsored by the 'Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), in order to understand the perceptual factors than can lead to pedestrian accidents.

The research group has recently published brain imaging research in the Proceedings of the Royal Society to show that some of the key components for detecting collision events lie at the brain-stem level, which is a low-level early detection system, similar to that found in other animals, such as pigeons.

Royal Holloway's research group ran demonstrations of their research studies in the London Science Museum over the summer where 500 visitors tried their tests. Related ongoing projects include a study sponsored by The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA) looking at the judgments of older drivers at road junctions, as well as a study looking at why motorcycles have a higher risk of being involved in accidents classified as 'looked but failed to see'.

Source: Royal Holloway, University of London

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