Friday, May 11, 2007

Automobile Hypnosis Is Latest Disease

1917

Another disease has been discovered which is said to account for so many automobile accidents. It is motor auto hypnosis. Men and women are alike affected by it, and unconsciously lose control of the steering wheel.

Psychologists offer various reasons for the trouble. The term has come into general use only recently, but has been more widely observed since the variety of the phenomenon has been more closely studied.

It might be clearer to use the more readily comprehensive term of "automobile sleepiness."

There is, as most everyone knows, a certain lull about touring in a car. The air, the buzz of the motor, all have a tendency to quiet the nerves and produce a desire for sleep.

Frequently automobile accidents occur on country roads, with nothing to distract the attention of the driver of the car, no traffic to avoid, no bad places in the pavement. When such an inexplicable accident occurs the excuse that something went wrong with the steering gear is usually offered. In nine cases out of ten the steering gear was all right, but something went wrong with the man at the wheel.

A man was recently heard to remark to a friend about a remarkable experience he had enjoyed the night before when, he declared, he drove his car, after midnight, for nearly a mile and was asleep the entire time. Fortunately for the man, the street was wide and there were few cars out.

But this is merely an incident that is bringing before our psychologists this momentous question.

When an accident does happen it is but natural that the man dislikes to acknowledge his negligence. He has to blame somebody, so he blames the car.

Now come certain responsible scientists who prove conclusively that the man at the wheel is not always to blame. He is a victim of auto hypnosis. He becomes unconsciously drowsy. The feeling creeps on him unawares and before he knows it he loses control of the wheel and accidents follow.

There seems to be reason in this theory, and if there is, the victim should permit someone else who is immune from the affection to handle his car in future. Public and his personal safety demands this.

—New Castle News, New Castle, PA, April 13, 1917, p. 8.

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