Idle Banter For non SV and non bike related chat (and the odd bit of humour - but if any post isn't suitable it'll get deleted real quick). There's also a "U" rating so please respect this. Newbies can also say "hello" here too. |
|
Thread Tools |
05-03-07, 07:48 PM | #1 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Hmm Interesting....
....Got this in an email a moment ago from the British Psychological Society who email me new research (im in my final year studying for a psychology Bsc Hons degree at university) and thought id share it with you all - may offer one of many explanations why car drivers just dont see bikes!
Obviously it has it has it flaws, but its still pretty interesting. Maria --->> There's a storm of sensory information out there in the world but your brain can only process so much at once. To cope, it's armed with an attentional spotlight that allows you to focus on what you're interested in and ignore the rest. This metaphorical spotlight is a clever piece of kit - its beam needn't be restricted like a torch to one region of space at time. It's rather more like a highlighter pen on a page - flagging up any objects that match the features, such as size and colour, that you've decided you're interested in. This is your mindset, or 'attentional set' as psychologists call it. The trouble is, what happens when a threat appears outside of your attentional set? When it comes to driving, Steven Most and Robert Astur report the consequences can be disastrous. Fifty-six participants navigated an urban route on a driving simulator. At each cross-roads there was a sign featuring blue and yellow arrows, and the participants were told to always follow the blue arrows or always follow the yellow arrows. This instruction fixed their 'attentional set'. Then suddenly at the tenth cross-roads, a blue or yellow motorbike swerved into their path. Crucially, for half the drivers, the bike was blue when they'd been instructed to follow yellow arrows, or vice versa. That is, the bike was inconsistent with their attentional set. These drivers braked 186ms slower than the drivers for whom the bike colour and relevant arrow colour matched. Moreover, 36 per cent of them collided with the bike compared with just 7 per cent of the drivers for whom the bike and arrows matched. "Had this been a real situation instead of a simulation, the consequences of these collisions could have been life-threatening", the researchers said. "It appears that attentional set wields substantial power even when the behavioural urgency of a stimulus might be predicted to override, or 'short-circuit', top-down attentional control". |
05-03-07, 08:15 PM | #2 |
Member
Mega Poster
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Barnet Herts
Posts: 5,070
|
Re: Hmm Interesting....
Must get a multicoloured bike.Nothing like hedging your bets.
__________________
On a clear day we stand there and look further than the ordinary eye can see. |
05-03-07, 08:24 PM | #3 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Re: Hmm Interesting....
Quote:
Seriously though, I wear high-vis for 90% of my riding at least. Being in North Wales people have high-vis jackets programmed into their "attention set" because of fear of NIPs etc. The difference to drivers reactions when I'm wearing high-vis compared to when I'm not (my normal jacket matches the colour of the bike pretty much) is definately noticable. In high-vis, I'm seen earlier, people move over, and most humourous, when I flash for them to pull out, I never get anything that could be interpreted as a thank you! Not in high-vis, I'm just another biker. People wave/indicate to say thanks & try to kill me happily. Bu**ers! |
|
05-03-07, 08:40 PM | #4 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Re: Hmm Interesting....
Quote:
Talking of high-vis jackets, i read an article in "performance bikes" magazine (nicked it off matt to read hehe) a while ago and it had these two men who got "polite" put on their high-vis jackets - loads of people mistook them for police and moved right out of their way! Maria |
|
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
This looks interesting! | shifter | SV Talk, Tuning & Tweaking | 7 | 09-03-08 05:15 PM |
An Interesting day out 24/25 Feb? | independentphoto | SV Ecosse | 3 | 18-02-07 07:02 PM |
Interesting... | curium | Bikes - Talk & Issues | 2 | 07-07-06 09:33 PM |
Interesting Day | lynw | Idle Banter | 9 | 12-04-06 04:06 PM |