La Trobe

Effects of multitasking and intention–behaviour consistency when facing yellow traffic light uncertainty

journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-08, 02:47 authored by Daniel Wright, Philippe ChouinardPhilippe Chouinard
We examined the effects of multitasking on resolving response bistability to yellow traffic lights, using the performance metrics of reaction time and stopping frequency. We also examined whether people’s actual behaviours, measured by implicit foot pedal responses, differed from their intentions related to these factors, as measured by explicit verbal commands. In a dual-task paradigm, participants responded to random traffic light changes, presented over a static background photograph of an intersection, using either foot pedals or verbal commands, while simultaneously identifying spoken words as either “animals” or “artefacts” via button pressing. The dual-task condition was found to prolong reaction times relative to a single-task condition. In addition, verbal commands were faster than the foot pedal responses, and conservativeness was the same for both types of responses. A second experiment, which provided a more dynamic simulation of the first experiment, confirmed that conservativeness did not differ between verbal commands and foot pedal responses. We conclude that multitasking affects a person’s ability to resolve response bistability to yellow traffic lights. If one considers that prolonged reaction times reduce the amount of distance available to safely stop at intersections, this study underscores how multitasking poses a considerable safety risk for drivers approaching a yellow traffic light.

Funding

Determining the neural mechanisms of visual stimuli and motor responses

Australian Research Council

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History

Publication Date

2019-11-01

Journal

Attention, Perception and Psychophysics

Volume

81

Issue

8

Pagination

18p. (p. 2832-2849)

Publisher

Springer Nature

ISSN

1943-3921

Rights Statement

© The Psychonomic Society, Inc. 2019

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