Essay On Driving And Driving

1483 Words3 Pages

Does sleep deprivation substantially interfere with driving? Sleep deprivation is a top cause for motor accidents. It does substantially interfere with driving as drivers owing a sleep debt cannot function the same way a normal person would. In most if not all cases, sleep deprivation causes sleep, and when drivers sleep, they cannot react to on coming traffic and other hazardous situation on the road. In the article “Moderate sleep deprivation produces impairments in cognitive and motor performance equivalent to legally prescribed levels of alcohol intoxication,” by A.M Williamson and Anne-Marie Feyer, 2000, through the use of induction, has shown that Sleep deprivation does substantially interfere with driving, similar to an article “High …show more content…

Lee et al. also shows that fatigue will increase driving risk and much high potential for crash and therefore substantially interfere with driving. In this study, Michael L. Lee et al. used scientific method to determine whether or not an overworked or fatigued individual will have driving impairments. In order to test this, participants were gathered based on their job as night-shift worker. Participants were to drive in a vehicle after their night shift, the track was closed off to prevent unwanted …show more content…

A strength in this study would be the fact that it uses real life experience rather than using a computer and getting people to react to situations on the computer. Hands on experience is much more different in comparison to a simulation, simulation done on a computer is not nearly as immersive as the practical. Furthermore, this study compares and contrasts the individuals after night time work and individuals before night time work, hence giving readers a good general idea and what to expect when they are in a similar situation. A downside of this experiment would be that the people used were all from night shift, and though it gives a good indication of the expectation of sleep deprivation on driving, some might not be able to relate. It shows a definite result that “sleep deprivation substantially interfere with

Open Document