Assuming you are talking about driving. Specifics are really unknown but a good educated guess would say our brains are hardwired to do two kinds of thinking 1. latent thinking and 2. active thinking. The active focuses on what you are aware of the most, like talking to your friends on the phone. The latent thinking does the driving, thus in the event of an accident, your brain must shift the active part of itself from talking on the phone to driving, and all this in, potentially, a fraction of a second.
Yes, it affects reaction time considerably. Some research even states talking on a cell phone while driving is worse than driving drunk.
Talking on a cell phone or listening to music is a distraction. It causes a person to not pay as much attention to what's going on around them, making their reaction time slower.
yes
yes it does majorly
because the chemical message takes a while to diffuse
One why would you ask sorry not trying to be rude but the reaction time would be late and may not even happen
A catalyst affects the speed of a chemical reaction. If the chemical reaction gives off heat, the reaction may affect the temperature, but the catalyst by itself doesn't affect the temperature.
Factors that affect human reaction rates include age, physical condition, level of fatigue, state of mind, distractions, and presence of drugs or alcohol. Additionally, the complexity of the task being performed can also impact reaction times.
No it does not
Fatigue affects reaction time by making it slower.
- Level of fatigue, Insomnia - Level of Concentration, distractions - Depression or Happiness
yes, i know this because i did a science experiment on it
it will increase the time of the chemical reaction
Yes!
Yes, it does.
yes
age and experience affect the reaction time of a driver
Yes.
yes it does majorly