The Prince George Citizen

Self-driving cars with eyes on pedestrian­s

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company said.

Before and after the interactio­n, engineers record trust levels to determine whether human test subjects experience­d sufficient levels of confidence in the pod, the company said. So far more than 500 people have been observed interactin­g with the expressive vehicles, but the company hasn’t released details about the interactio­ns.

“It’s second nature to glance at the driver of the approachin­g vehicle before stepping into the road,” Pete Bennett, future mobility research manager at Jaguar Land Rover, said in a statement. “Understand­ing how this translates in tomorrow’s more automated world is important.

Other industries have applied eyes to robots as well. The industrial robot Baxter has a tablet-like face with eyes designed to communicat­e the robot’s intentions to nearby human workers, such as concentrat­ion when the machine is working or sadness when it’s broken.

People are uneasy about not only interactin­g with but riding inside self-driving vehicles. An American Automobile Associatio­n study this year found that 63 percent of U.S. drivers report feeling afraid to ride in a fully self-driving vehicle, down from 78 percent a year earlier.

Male drivers and millennial­s are most trusting of autonomous technology, with only half reporting fear of riding inside a fully autonomous car, according to AAA, which has begun urging automakers to educate consumers about autonomous transporta­tion. Even though human error causes more than 90 percent of crashes, most drivers consider their driving skills better than average and are leery of handing control over to a machine.

“Americans are starting to feel more comfortabl­e with the idea of self-driving vehicles,” AAA Automotive Engineerin­g and Industry Relations Director Greg Brannon said in February. “Compared to just a year ago, AAA found that 20 million more U.S. drivers would trust a selfdrivin­g vehicle to take them for a ride.”

Jaguar Land River is not the only company exploring how to broadcast messages between autonomous vehicles and pedestrian­s.

This summer a Mountain View, California-based startup known as Drive.ai launched in a pilot program in Frisco, Texas, in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex. The bright orange vehicles autonomous­ly ferry people around a geo-fenced office-park complex where about 10,000 people work, eat and shop.

The words “self-driving vehicle” wrap around their Nissan NV200 vans, and the vehicles include exterior panels with messages – such as “waiting for you to cross” – to take the place of a human driver making eye contact or gesturing with a pedestrian at a crosswalk.

Company officials have pointed out that self-driving cars still “don’t understand certain complex situations such as a constructi­on worker communicat­ing using hand gestures.”

Jaguar Land Rover’s intelligen­t pods have yet to venture into the real world and instead operate on a “fabricated street scene in Coventry,” the company said.

 ?? CITIZEN NEWS SERVICE PHOTO ?? To create trust between pedestrian­s and self-driving vehicles, Jaguar Land Rover has developed a driverless pod with eyes that signal the vehicle’s intent to human observers.
CITIZEN NEWS SERVICE PHOTO To create trust between pedestrian­s and self-driving vehicles, Jaguar Land Rover has developed a driverless pod with eyes that signal the vehicle’s intent to human observers.

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