Leukoaraiosis significantly worsens driving performance of ordinary older drivers

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Abstract

Background: Leukoaraiosis is defined as extracellular space caused mainly by atherosclerotic or demyelinated changes in the brain tissue and is commonly found in the brains of healthy older people. A significant association between leukoaraiosis and traffic crashes was reported in our previous study; however, the reason for this is still unclear. Copyright: Method: This paper presents a comprehensive evaluation of driving performance in ordinary older drivers with leukoaraiosis. First, the degree of leukoaraiosis was examined in 33 participants, who underwent an actual-vehicle driving examination on a standard driving course, and a driver skill rating was also collected while the driver carried out a paced auditory serial addition test, which is a calculating task given verbally. At the same time, a steering entropy method was used to estimate steering operation performance. Results: The experimental results indicated that a normal older driver with leukoaraiosis was readily affected by external disturbances and made more operation errors and steered less smoothly than one without leukoaraiosis during driving; at the same time, their steering skill significantly deteriorated. Conclusions: Leukoaraiosis worsens the driving performance of older drivers because of their increased vulnerability to distraction.

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APA

Nakano, K., Park, K., Zheng, R., Fang, F., Ohori, M., Nakamura, H., … Okada, S. (2014). Leukoaraiosis significantly worsens driving performance of ordinary older drivers. PLoS ONE, 9(10). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0108333

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