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Are you worried about staying safe behind the wheel? As a person ages, the specific skills necessary for safe driving begin to deteriorate. Eyesight and hearing worsen, reflexes slow and cognitive functions decline. Even though older adults are less likely to practice risky driving behaviors, a person’s chances of being in a fatal car accident begin to increase at age 75.
As you get older, there are steps you can take to keep your keys longer and maintain your mobility and independence. Studies show that strengthening cognitive skills through brain-training exercises and computer-based software can improve certain functional abilities, including driving. Using these programs can help you recognize driving skills that need improvement and potentially keep you driving safer, longer.
Often disguised as enjoyable games, the programs allow users to exercise specific cognitive functions necessary for driving. They can include exercises for improving:
- Focus
- Reaction time
- Memory
- Decision making
- Multitasking and attention skills
- Speed of information processing
Improving your useful field of view
Many of these computer-based brain-fitness programs test one cognitive skill in particular: useful field of view (UFOV) for visual processing. UFOV is the visual area in which you can process information in a single glance without making head or eye movements; the UFOV programs were developed in part by experimental psychologist Karlene Ball.
Drivers with limited UFOV aren’t able to quickly see and process information about objects moving toward them, which can lead to crashes. But like other cognitive skills, UFOV can be improved through practice. In one particular study led by Ball, participants who received computer-based UFOV speed-of-processing training were half as likely to be in an at-fault car accident over their next six years of driving.
State Farm offers even more tips for staying safe on the road as an older driver.
The information in this article was obtained from various sources. While we believe it to be reliable and accurate, we do not warrant the accuracy or reliability of the information. These suggestions are not a complete list of every loss control measure. The information is not intended to replace manuals or instructions provided by the manufacturer or the advice of a qualified professional. Nor is it intended to effect coverage under any policy. State Farm makes no guarantees of results from use of this information. We assume no liability in connection with the information nor the suggestions made.
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