The Borneo Post

Self-driving test van ‘talks’ to pedestrian­s via light signals

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WASHINGTON: Ford Motor Co and Virginia Tech Transporta­tion Institute are testing a way to enable selfdrivin­g vehicles to communicat­e their movements visually to pedestrian­s, cyclists and to human drivers, the researcher­s said on Wednesday.

The new communicat­ions method, which uses simple light signals to depict whether a selfdrivin­g vehicle is slowing or accelerati­ng, has the potential to become a universal industry standard in all countries, Ford and institute researcher­s said.

The carmaker set out to find “a way to replace the head nod or hand wave” to convey to pedestrian­s the intent of a driverless vehicle, according to John Shutko, Ford’s human factors technical specialist.

Researcher­s rejected the use of displayed text because of potential language barriers, and symbols because of their low recognitio­n.

Instead, they settled on visual signals from a light bar placed on the windshield of a Ford Transit Van. A solid white light shows the vehicle is in full autonomous mode, a blinking white light indicates accelerati­on and a pair of white lights moving side to side signals slowing and stopping.

The specially outfitted Transit Van logged 1,800 miles ( 2,900 km) in August, much of it in and around Arlington, Virginia, including urban intersecti­ons, parking lots and garages.

The aim of the exercise was to capture on video human reactions to both a self- driving vehicle and to the light signals from the windshield.

The van was piloted by a human driver, who wore a camouflage­d “seat suit” to simulate a driverless vehicle. The vehicles drew some attention on social and local news media reports.

The research effort supports vehicle manufactur­ers and users, but also “anyone who walks, rides or drives alongside autonomous vehicles in the future,” said Andy Schaudt, project director at the institute’s Center for Automated Vehicle Systems.

Shutko said “the biggest failure mode” would be if every carmaker had a different way of alerting pedestrian­s of driverless vehicles. The company is working with an industry group and other carmakers “to try to gain global consensus.”

Shutko said the company is conscious of the potential backlash to fully self- driving cars.

Ford has set a target of putting a self- driving shuttle into commercial ride- sharing fleets by 2021. — Reuters

The research effort supports vehicle manufactur­ers and users, but also anyone who walks, rides or drives alongside autonomous vehicles in the future. Andy Schaudt, project director at the institute’s Centre for Automated Vehicle Systems.

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