Pubdate: Wed, 18 Nov 2015 Source: Metro (Toronto, CN ON) Copyright: 2015 Metro Canada Contact: http://www.metronews.ca/toronto Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3462 Author: Chris Bateman Page: 6 TAKING A SPIN WITH DRUGGED DRIVERS Simulator Lets Experts Study Effects of Cannabis If Justin Trudeau's Liberal government legalizes marijuana in Canada, research by drug experts at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto may play a role in how it's enforced. For the last two years, scientists Robert Mann and Gina Stoduto have been giving test subjects a joint, putting them behind the wheel of a driving simulator and recording what happens under controlled conditions. "The No. 1 drug found in dead and injured drivers after alcohol is cannabis," Mann said. "Teenage drivers in high school are now more likely to drive after cannabis use than they are after drinking." Based on a real Chevrolet Cavalier, the $ 100,000 simulator has a realistic ignition and functioning instrument panel. Monitors provide a 180-degree view, and the seat vibrates based on the road surface. "At certain points on the roadway, we programmed it to collect data like average speed and how they're staying in the lane," said Stoduto. Participants in the study were regular recreational marijuana users aged 19 to 25. Researchers screened for signs of drug dependency and other risk factors. "The cigarette weighs the same for everybody," said Stoduto. "We allow them to smoke up to 10 minutes, and they can consume as much as they want, so everyone takes a different dose." The study is double blind, meaning neither the participants nor researchers know until after who smoked real marijuana and who received a placebo produced by the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse. Mann and Stoduto are still gathering data, but preliminary results suggest marijuana does have a negative effect on drivers. "The drug does seem to be changing the way people drive," Mann said. "It's hard for us to look at the data and say, 'That's a mistake.' We can say it's ' different.' "Give us another six months and we'll tell you what the data tells us." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom