


Jonathon M. Vivoda, the Program Coordinator for M-CASTL, is a Research Associate at the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute (UMTRI), where he has worked since 1998. He is currently enrolled in the Health Behavior and Health Education (HBHE) department's PhD program at the University of Michigan School of Public Health. During the school year, Mr. Vivoda works on M-CASTL activities as a Graduate Student Research Assistant. He holds a master of public health degree in HBHE, and a bachelor degree in psychology, both from the University of Michigan. Mr. Vivoda’s research interests include age related driving problems, motor vehicle occupant restraint system use, driver distraction, the effects of ITS technology on driver behavior, and understanding motor vehicle crash trends.
Mr. Vivoda is an expert in organizing and managing field data collection for occupant protection use surveys and has developed methods of using personal digital assistants (PDAs) for the collection of many types of field data. He has investigated occupant protection use by various demographic and environmental characteristics, including race, sex, age, vehicle type, and vehicle purpose (commercial versus non-commercial), and has conducted studies of the interactions of cell phone use and safety belt use. Mr. Vivoda has also developed procedures for observing safety belt use by motorists traveling at night, utilizing specialized night vision equipment. He has performed critical reviews of traffic safety literature; managed the collection and organization of various types of complex electronic and hardcopy data from sources such as law enforcement agencies, courts, and prosecutors. For information about Mr. Vivoda's publications, projects, and areas of expertise, please click here.