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David
February 23rd, 2006, 07:59 AM
Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2006
Study: In-Car Cell Phone Use Lowers TSL

Bridge Ratings recently completed its first six-month analysis of
in-car cell phone use as part of a commissioned, multi-year study for
a wireless service provider, and Bridge President Dave Van Dyke says
the early results show that the more time a commuter spends talking on
their cell phone, the less time they spend listening to the radio. "A
significant percentage of drivers either turned their radios down or
off when engaged in a cell phone call," he said. "The implications are
clear: the cell phone is vying for true Time Spent Listening in-car."

Bridge studied 2,000 cell phone users 18 years of age and older in Los
Angeles, San Francisco, Dallas, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Toronto and
the Burlington, VT area. Of those queried, 79% said they turned down
the radio while on a cell phone call. An additional 19% turned the
radio off while chatting on the phone. Only those who spent at least
one hour per day commuting in their vehicle were included and actual
time spent listening to the radio was measured against time spent
talking on cell phones. Bridge found that the amount of calls per
commute rose from 2.1 calls per commute in 2001 to 3.1 calls in 2005.
The average length of a cell phone call has risen from 2.74 minutes to
3.29 minutes over that same time period.


randr

BD
February 24th, 2006, 01:32 PM
And who paid for this yet-one-more I-really-really-needed-to-know-THAT
study?....
Why bother even posting it here? Yet-one-more-Really-really-bored person,
huh?

"David" <rickets@knac.com> wrote in message
news:4iirv11rhcbjhc0ukno9oo7sc9ln3nod5q@4ax.com...
> Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2006
> Study: In-Car Cell Phone Use Lowers TSL
>
> Bridge Ratings recently completed its first six-month analysis of
> in-car cell phone use as part of a commissioned, multi-year study for
> a wireless service provider, and Bridge President Dave Van Dyke says
> the early results show that the more time a commuter spends talking on
> their cell phone, the less time they spend listening to the radio. "A
> significant percentage of drivers either turned their radios down or
> off when engaged in a cell phone call," he said. "The implications are
> clear: the cell phone is vying for true Time Spent Listening in-car."
>
> Bridge studied 2,000 cell phone users 18 years of age and older in Los
> Angeles, San Francisco, Dallas, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Toronto and
> the Burlington, VT area. Of those queried, 79% said they turned down
> the radio while on a cell phone call. An additional 19% turned the
> radio off while chatting on the phone. Only those who spent at least
> one hour per day commuting in their vehicle were included and actual
> time spent listening to the radio was measured against time spent
> talking on cell phones. Bridge found that the amount of calls per
> commute rose from 2.1 calls per commute in 2001 to 3.1 calls in 2005.
> The average length of a cell phone call has risen from 2.74 minutes to
> 3.29 minutes over that same time period.
>
>
> randr
>


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