Texting while walking makes you go wonky, researchers say

Look out, texting walker.

(Credit: Ed Yourdon)

Just as I don’t text and drive, I also don’t text and walk. I stand still to do my digital business. Sure, like everybody else, I was curious if I could successfully walk and text at the same time. But one jarring landing down a driveway drop-off was enough to make me give it up for good. Now, I have some scientific backing for my decision.

A team of researchers from the University of Queensland in Australia conducted a study titled “Texting and Walking: Strategies for Postural Control and Implications for Safety.” The work focused on the gait performance of 26 healthy individuals when walking normally, reading on a phone, and then texting.

Not too surprisingly, the study found people walk funny when they text, much more so than when just walking or even when walking and reading. They slowed down and deviated from a straight line, which the researchers attribute to mental distraction, the odd mechanics of holding a phone while typing on it, and a reduced visual field from focusing on the screen.

The study concludes:

We demonstrate slower walking speed, greater deviation from a straight path and increase absolute lateral step deviation in conjunction with increased rotation ROM [range of motion] of the head in global space… [Read more]

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