Los Angeles Times

Insurers’ new strategy to deter distracted driving

Tech companies are monitoring motorists and alerting them to their bad behaviors. It seems to help.

- By Kyle Stock

The distracted-driving report by Zendrive, a trafficdat­a start-up, makes it clearer each year that millions of Americans can’t stop themselves from talking, texting and livestream­ing — even using FaceTime — while driving. The results have been increasing­ly unsettling, showing that drivers in the United States are becoming more likely to use their smartphone­s more often.

This year, in a new twist, the company took the usage data from the tens of millions of cellphones it monitors and combined it with a self-assessment of the same drivers: Are you good at focusing on the road? The worrying verdict: American drivers have no idea how often they use their phones. The most distracted drivers in Zendrive’s sample gave themselves high marks for paying attention, with about one-third of the worst multitaske­rs considerin­g themselves “extremely safe.”

“It’s just terrifying,” said Zendrive Chief Executive Jonathan Matus. “We’ve built these highly addictive experience­s, and people can’t help themselves.”

Matus should know — he helped design Facebook’s mobile app before launching the San Francisco service intended to help insurance companies and fleet managers identify bad drivers. Basically, he’s now trying to short-circuit all the work he did in his previous job to hook us to our phones.

Fully autonomous vehicles that can operate safely without attention from human drivers, leaving us free to focus on our screens, remain a long way out. The laws that prohibit drivers from touching smartphone­s are patchy and difficult to enforce. In the meantime, safety regulators, insurance companies and technologi­sts have turned to an incrementa­l fix for distractio­n: monitoring the driver, not the vehicle. The hope is that awareness may just succeed where policies and penalties have not.

Zendrive now has its monitoring technology on 60 million phones, about 1 in 4 U.S. drivers. TrueMotion, a Boston rival, is tracking distractio­n and other driving metrics for eight of the top 20 U.S. auto insurers, and an additional 30,000 drivers have voluntaril­y downloaded the TrueMotion sys

tem in an attempt to selfregula­te tendencies to talk and text at the wheel.

A third provider, Cambridge Mobile Telematics, monitors distracted driving for 35 insurers, including State Farm. In addition to siphoning smartphone data, Cambridge Mobile uses a Fig Newton-size puck that provides even better metrics on vehicle performanc­e and phone use. This quarter, the Massachuse­tts company shipped 8 million of the devices.

The reason for all this data is that at least 1 in 5 U.S. auto insurance policies now offers a potential discount if the customer consents to a vehicle monitor. Taken together, there’s a very complete picture of the dangerous driving that has led to the 15% surge in annual U.S. traffic fatalities from 2014 to 2016.

Early indicators suggest that simple awareness may be an effective antidote. Cambridge Mobile said distractio­n levels drop 35% among participan­ts who check their data regularly. “Just seeing the results helps,” said Ryan McMahon, vice president of marketing. “It’s almost like going into a restaurant and being able to see calories on a menu.”

ConnectedT­ravel, a Pacific Palisades app maker, is now rewarding tens of thousands of drivers in Las Vegas and San Diego for driving as they did before cellphones. “Nobody believes you can change people’s behaviors — that’s a common view in the industry,” CEO Bryan Biniak said. “But when you start to create awareness, it’s impactful.”

Early trials among those using the ConnectedT­ravel app show a 40% reduction in phone use; 4 in 5 participan­ts check their driving metrics daily. “We just provide you with stats, just like fantasy sports or anything else,” Biniak said.

The early results point to a market triumph over bad behavior that lawmakers, police and advocacy groups have struggled to deter. Underwrite­rs who are best able to identify distracted­driving tendencies are better able to price the accompanyi­ng risk. Most insurance companies still only offer discounts for good cellphone behavior, but a growing number are using the findings to raise rates on serial tap-and-swipers.

Distracted driving is more predictive of an eventual loss claim than virtually any other behavior, including speeding and braking. Those who tend to use cellphones at the wheel have 20% more insurance claims than others in the risk pool, according to TrueMotion.

Eventually, the margins of underwrite­rs who best identify inattentiv­e drivers will improve, experts say, while their worst customers will get nudged to less-vigilant rivals, further muddying those risk pools. As a result, insurance companies of all sizes are hustling to roll out smartphone monitoring systems.

Although the proliferat­ion of robot chaperones is encouragin­g, the data they are collecting are grim. Distractio­n has increased in every part of the country, despite a rash of new laws intended to curb cellphone use at the wheel. Zendrive said distracted driving levels increased 10% in the last year. Today, the company considers 1 in 12 drivers a phone addict — on their phones at least one-third of the time at the wheel — and that measure is climbing fast. At the current rate, 1 in 5 will fall into that category within three years.

“It’s a massive epidemic,” Zendrive’s Matus said. “And there is clearly a dissonance between what people believe the state of the world is and what they’re doing.”

Distractio­n “is embedded in the culture of driving,” said Thomas Dingus, director of the Virginia Tech Transporta­tion Institute. His recent research, which tracks eye patterns, shows drivers are distracted more than half the time.

Curbing phone use is even a growing problem among self-driving startups. Most of the vehicles in robot-driven fleets still require human chaperones, at least for the time being. That means recruiting and training a safety workforce that has almost nothing to do, if all is going as planned; often, however, it doesn’t. Uber paused its autonomous-car program’s road testing a year ago after one of its vehicles struck and killed a pedestrian. The backup driver in that instance was watching “The Voice” on her phone at the time.

Ford, which has backed self-driving start-up Argo AI , has struggled with driving chaperones falling asleep. Alphabet’s Waymo, widely considered at the front of the self-driving pack, still has two humans in its vehicles much of the time.

It turns out people aren’t wired for the kind of “passive vigilance” required to monitor a sentient vehicle. Federal safety regulators have sounded the warning on this, noting that cognitive limitation­s could be a dangerous stumbling block on the long path from analog driving to fully automated vehicles.

Little of this is surprising, even among the most inattentiv­e drivers. The majority of Americans now consider distracted driving the top threat to safety on the road, far more dangerous than driving under the influence or speeding, according to a recent survey by Volvo. About one-third of respondent­s say they turn on “do not disturb” modes on their phones, and 3 in 4 people surveyed would pay more for a vehicle with features designed to prevent distractio­n.

But it’s becoming clear that distracted drivers seldom have a good sense of their own conduct. TrueMotion found that those using its monitoring technology reduce their distractio­n levels by 20% after being notified when their phones are used while driving. Those who don’t see their own records of distracted driving, however, use their phones 25% more often.

Cambridge Mobile cofounder Hari Balakrishn­an said in a phone interview last week that he was optimistic, in part, because the accident-claims rate among the drivers on his platform is 47% lower than average. “I think I lot of people do, in fact, want to get better,” he said. “They just don’t have the granular informatio­n.”

The call ended abruptly when Balakrishn­an — talking on a hands-free system — was rear-ended at a red light. The other driver got out of his car with cellphone in hand. “Thankfully it was just a nudge,” Balakrishn­an said when he called back. “But honestly, you can’t make this up.”

 ?? Spencer Platt Getty Images ?? SOME OF the most distracted drivers in Zendrive’s study gave themselves high marks for paying attention. Above, a driver uses a phone in New York in 2016.
Spencer Platt Getty Images SOME OF the most distracted drivers in Zendrive’s study gave themselves high marks for paying attention. Above, a driver uses a phone in New York in 2016.
 ?? Matt McClain Washington Post ?? THE LAWS that prohibit drivers from touching smartphone­s are patchy and difficult to enforce. Safety regulators, insurers and technologi­sts have turned to an incrementa­l fix: monitoring the driver, not the vehicle.
Matt McClain Washington Post THE LAWS that prohibit drivers from touching smartphone­s are patchy and difficult to enforce. Safety regulators, insurers and technologi­sts have turned to an incrementa­l fix: monitoring the driver, not the vehicle.

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