WALKIE TALKIE

Using mobile phones on the go is giving us silly walks, researchers claim

Scientists found walking texters are making over-the-top strides to avoid tripping and bashing into people

MOBILE phones are changing the way people walk as they take giant strides to avoid hazards and passers-by when texting.

Walking texters are adopting over-the-top movements for safety reasons, researchers at an American uni discovered.

Alamy
This is a very common sight – a young man listening music with smartphone earphones walking in the street

Alamy
Walking while texting is changing the way humans walk according to this US study

The University of Delaware asked 22 volunteers to dial a number on their mobile phone while walking on a treadmill for two minutes.

The walkers wore 62 reflective markers on the arms, trunk, pelvis and legs which were picked up by motion cameras to measure knee flexion, hip movement and leg swing.

This experiment showed that the volunteers used strange exaggerated strides, bending their knees on each step with their ankles fulled flexed,  reports.

Scientists concluded the large movements were to naturally step over tripping hazards, negotiate crowds and make up for diminished vision.

RELATED STORIES

CELL PHONES SCANDAL
Video reveals how easy it is to smuggle mobiles into prison using MARS BARS (but you really don't want to know where they get hidden)
CAR CALLS BUST FALLS
Drivers fined for using mobile phones behind wheel plummets despite number of offences rising

First author Kelly Seymour from the University of Delaware said: “Our results suggest that when dialing a phone while walking, healthy adults adopt a more cautious gait pattern, which may limit the risk of falling.”

There were so FEW mistakes in number dialling during the test that it appeared volunteers felt using their phones was more important than walking.

A recent study found that saggy neck caused from looking down your phone and disrupted sleep from handset blue lights is just the tip of the iceberg.

Text-walkers has become such a problem that last year Antwerp in Belgium brought in ‘text walking lanes’ so that they do not irritate or endanger other pedestrians.

Alamy
The study found walking texters take massive strides to avoid tripping over hazards

Last year University of Bath researchers found we alter the way we walk when we text to avoid accidents, after an experiment involving 30 people aged 18 to 50-years-old.

Lecturer Dr Polly McGuigan said: ““We found that our participants were very good at adapting the way they walk to limit their risk of injury, and there were very few occasions when a participant hit an obstacle. This may be because many of the participants had grown up using a mobile phone and are very used to multi-tasking.”

 


We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online news team? Email us at tips@the-sun.co.uk or call 0207 782 4368


 

Exit mobile version