An investigation of the effects of the common cold on simulated driving performance and detection of collisions


Organisation: University of Leeds (Institute for Transport Studies)
Date uploaded: 9th January 2013
Date published/launched: September 2012


The aim of this research was to investigate whether individuals with the common cold showed impaired ability on a simulated driving task and the ability to detect potential collisions between moving objects.

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Studies of simulated driving have played a major role in transport policy and practice. The aim of the present research was to investigate whether individuals with a common cold showed impaired ability on a simulated driving task and the ability to detect potential collisions between moving objects.

25 students from the University of Leeds participated. 10 volunteers were healthy on both occasions and 15 had a cold on the first session and were healthy on the second. In the collision detection task, the main outcomes were correct detections and response to a secondary identification task. In the simulated driving task, the outcomes were speed, lateral control, gap acceptance, overtaking behaviour, car following, vigilance and traffic light violations.

Key results and conclusions
Those with a cold detected fewer collisions and had a higher divided attention error than those who were healthy. Many basic driving skills were unimpaired by the illness. However, those with a cold were slower at responding to unexpected events and spent a greater percentage of time driving at a headway of <2 s. The finding that having a common cold is associated with reduced ability to detect collisions and respond quickly to unexpected events is of practical importance. Further research is now required to examine the efficacy of information campaigns and countermeasures such as caffeine.

For more information contact:
Samantha Jamson

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