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Vlingo Reveals New Data Regarding Teen Driver Distractions as Nation Prepares for National Teen Driver Safety Week

 
 

60% of Teens Admit to Reading Text Messages While Driving

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Oct. 19 /PRNewswire/ -- Vlingo Corporation released new data regarding teen distracted driving habits today from its second annual Vlingo Consumer Mobile Messaging Habits Report as the nation prepares for National Teen Driver Safety Week October 18-24. The Vlingo report finds 60 percent of teens admit to reading incoming text messages while driving.

Text messaging has overtaken the phone as the primary communications medium for teens. According to the Vlingo study, 94 percent of teens use their mobile phones to send text messages. Fifty-four percent send more than 500 text messages per month and 79 percent send more text messages than make phone calls. Teens use text messaging primarily to communicate with friends (72 percent).

While 62 percent of teens support making driving while texting (DWT) illegal, only 34 percent favor making it illegal if a hands-free solution was available. Notably, teens are in favor of technology that would make DWT safer. Ninety percent of teens would use a technology solution that let them speak text and email messages by voice and have incoming messages read to them while driving instead of typing.

"The use of text messaging will only increase, and will continue to take place on the roads as this generation gets older and others follow in their footsteps," said Dave Grannan, CEO of Vlingo. "However, today's teens have demonstrated that they are eager to adopt new technologies, particularly options that improve road safety. It is our responsibility to look into innovative solutions that embrace these consumer usage trends to make the roads safer."

Data from Vlingo's Consumer Mobile Messaging Habits Report also showed that laws do not necessarily stop dangerous DWT activity. The report shows that two of the top five worst offending states (TN, NJ, AL, ID, OK) have some form of DWT/mobile phone ban in place or pending (one of which is focused solely on young drivers). Of the five states with the best records (AZ, VT, RI, OH, MI), only Rhode Island has a ban on DWT and it only applies to those under the age of 18. As of September 2009 only nine states ban driving while texting for teenagers and only 40 percent of teenagers are aware if their state has a ban on driving while texting.

As lawmakers discussed the dangers of driving while texting and a potential nationwide ban at last month's Distracted Driving Summit, the nation is coming up on National Teen Driver Safety Week October 18-24, which Congress designated in 2007 to highlight the epidemic of teen car crashes in the US. Teen driver safety recommendations can be found here http://www.ridelikeafriend.com/organizer/?p=recommend.

Methodology

The Vlingo Consumer Mobile Messaging Habits Report was fielded by independent panel research firm Toluna and responses were generated from a survey among 4,816 online opinion panel members (age 13 or older) living in the continental United States. The sample was matched to U.S. Census proportions on gender, age and ethnicity and included approximately 100 respondents from each of the 48 contiguous U.S. states. Respondents were also screened for mobile phone ownership and usage. The survey bears a statistical accuracy of +/- 1.41% for the total sample at the 95% confidence level.

The full report can be requested at http://vlingo.com/habits.

Follow Vlingo on Twitter at http://twitter.com/vlingo and on the Vlingo blog at http://blog.vlingo.com for regular news and updates.

About Vlingo

Vlingo lets people control their mobile phones with the power of voice. With Vlingo, people can simply speak to their phone to send a text or email message, call a friend, search the mobile Web, update their Facebook status, and a whole lot more. As the inventor of the mobile phone "voice user interface," Vlingo is the only technology that allows people to open and use virtually any application on the phone simply by pressing a button and speaking to the phone. Founded in 2006, Vlingo is backed by Charles River Ventures, Sigma Partners, Yahoo! and AT&T and headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts. For more information, go to www.vlingo.com.

SOURCE Vlingo Corporation

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