Researchers at the University of Minnesota developed the Teen Driver Support System (TDSS) smartphone app and tested it in a study involving 300 newly licensed teens from 18 Minnesota communities.
The app automatically prevents teens from using their phones or texting while driving except to call emergency services, a critical safety component since distracted driving is a frequent cause of car accidents and deaths, 'startribune.Com' reported.
"Ultimately, we did the research because we wanted to reduce traffic crashes and deaths among teens," said Janet Creaser, a research fellow at the University of Minnesota's HumanFIRST Laboratory.
If the teen violated good driving etiquette, their parents received a text message. Parents also had access to a website detailing their teen's driving "events and behaviours" over a longer period of time.
Also Read
More than 90 per cent parents said they would recommend the app to other parents.