Do digital billboards distract drivers? Lethbridge enters debate - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 05:13 AM | Calgary | -12.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Do digital billboards distract drivers? Lethbridge enters debate

Lethbridge is taking a closer look at digital billboards amid calls for a ban on such advertisements in the interest of traffic safety.

Bright lights and motion can distract drivers, says expert

New rules for digital billboards are up for debate in the southern Alberta city of Lethbridge. (CBC)

Lethbridge is taking a closer look at digital billboards amid calls for a ban on such advertisements in the interest of traffic safety.

Coun. JefferyCoffman, whois chairing a commission on new rules for digital billboardsand signs, saystheyare "TV on a stick" and distracting to drivers.

AnthonySinghal, a psychology andneuroscienceprofessor at the University of Alberta, agrees.

"The biggest issue with electronic billboards, in terms of driver distraction, is that because they have bright lights or they can have motion. They have the ability to attract your attention."

Singhal said once something has your attention, you have to spend time analyzingit.

"Then you spend time perhaps, you know, several seconds taking your mind off the road and I think the potential for that being a more dangerous situation ishigh."

Research highlights risk

Research out of Sweden that monitored peoples eyes while driving in a real car showed that digital billboards cantake people's eyes off the road for two to three seconds.

"Anytime you take your eyes off the road for that length of time, you are at risk for collision," saidSinghal.

Thisresearch aloneis not enough to make it clear that this is a traffic safety hazard though, he added.

"All they were able to determine was that the eyes were off the road for that period of time."

"It's too early to say that they cancause an accident, but I think it's not too early to say that if they're in certain parts of the road they can be dangerous," saidSinghal.

Rules needed?

He said a total ban may not be necessaryif they just impose some rules.

"One would be to make sure that the brightnessof the billboard changes with the brightness of the day."

Sometimesdigital signs can be helpful to drivers, he said.

"There is electronic information that is helpful. I mean on certain highway stretches you can get information about, you know, the traffic situation up ahead and that can be helpful to drivers or if the informationisgiving you your speed," he said.

"I think it's if the information is really provocative in another way or really attention grabbing in another way that it can be dangerous."