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This is Scientific American's 60-Second Tech. I'm Larry Greenemeier. Got a minute?

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You don't need to be in a car crash or to see the horrifying safety statistics to know that you should never text while driving.

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A driver simply cannot look at both a smartphone screen and the road at the same time.

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Taking your eyes off the road for even five seconds at 55 miles per hour is like driving the length of a football field blindfolded.

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But could a head-mounted, voice-controlled display like Google Glass solve the distracted-driving problem?

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In a word, "No," according to a recent University of Central Florida study.

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Researchers found that drivers in a simulator reacted slowly to sudden traffic emergencies regardless of whether they were thumbing texts into their smartphones or dictating them to Google Glass.

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Glass-wearing drivers did recover more quickly from near accidents than hand-texters.

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Could be because they weren't fishing around on the floor for their dropped smartphone.

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The real problem is driver multitasking.

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Texting is especially problematic because it involves simultaneous manual, visual and cognitive distraction.

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Glass doesn't completely eliminate the problem because simply looking at the road doesn't necessarily mean you're paying attention to it.

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Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American's 60-Second Tech. I'm Larry Greenemeier.

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