Smartphone zombie
A smartphone zombie (German: smombie[1][2]) is a pedestrian who walks slowly and without attention to their surroundings because they are focused upon their smartphone. This is now a significant safety hazard as distracted pedestrians cause accidents. Cities such as Chongqing and Antwerp have introduced special lanes for smartphone users to help direct and manage them.[3][4]
In 2014, China had over five hundred million smartphone users and more than half of them have a phone addiction. In Chongqing, the government built a cellphone sidewalk, separating the phone users and the non-cell phone users.[5][6] In Hong Kong, they are called dai tau juk (the head-down tribe).[7]
Texting pedestrians may trip over curbs, walk out in front of cars and bump into other walkers. The field of vision of a smartphone user is estimated to be just 5% of a normal pedestrian's.[8] An app which uses the phone's camera to make it seem transparent can be used to provide some warning of hazards.[9][10] In Augsburg and Cologne, ground-level traffic lights embedded in the pavement have been introduced so that they are more visible to preoccupied pedestrians.[11] In Seoul, warning signs have been placed on the pavement at dangerous intersections following over a thousand road accidents caused by smartphones in South Korea in 2014.[12]
Gallery
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App for smartphone zombie (SafteyView at google play)
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See also
References
- ↑ "Teens pick 'Smombie' as hippest German word", The Local, Germany, 14 November 2015
- ↑ ""Smombie" ist das Jugendwort des Jahres". Sueddeutsche.de (in German). 13 November 2015.
- ↑ Leo Benedictus (15 September 2014), "Chinese city opens 'phone lane' for texting pedestrians", The Guardian
- ↑ David Chazan (14 June 2015), "Antwerp introduces 'text walking lanes' for pedestrians using mobile phones", The Daily Telegraph
- ↑ David Raven (15 September 2014), "World's first mobile phone walking lane for 'zombie pedestrians' addicted to texting", Daily Mirror
- ↑ Heather Chen (7 September 2015), Asia's Smartphone Addiction, Singapore: BBC News
- ↑ Mark Sharp (2 March 2015), "Beware the Smartphone Zombies Blindly Wandering Around Hong Kong", South China Morning Post
- ↑ "Japan's smartphone 'zombies' turn urban areas into human pinball", Japan Times, 17 November 2014
- ↑ Ellie Zolfagharifard (4 March 2014), "Text AND walk: App makes your mobile 'transparent' so you can see the street in front of you while typing", Daily Mail
- ↑ Peter Apps (31 March 2014), "'Transparent' iPhones: A text and walk plan for those trying to do two things at once", Independent
- ↑ Janek Schmidt (29 April 2016), "Always practise safe text: the German traffic light for smartphone zombies", The Guardian
- ↑ Max Bearak (21 June 2016), "Seoul wants 'smartphone zombies' to read road signs instead", Washington Post
Further reading
- Hookham, Mark; Togoh, Isabel; Yeates, Alex (21 February 2016). "Walkers hit by curse of the smombie". The Sunday Times. UK.
- Hatton, Celia (15 September 2014). "Chongqing's 'mobile lane'". BBC News. UK: BBC.