Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Yikes, a driverless car; well not exactly

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PEDESTRIAN­S are getting a peek into a future of driverless cars “with a little help from a camouflage­d seat suit”.

Ford has designed the suit to trick people into thinking there’s no driver at the wheel of the car. The driver wears a fake headrest over his face and his torso is behind a custom- sewn upholstery cover.

The bizarre sight was part of a test to see how pedestrian­s react to seeing driverless cars. Ford wants to create a way for self-driving vehicles to communicat­e their movements visually to pedestrian­s, cyclists and human drivers.

The method, which uses simple light signals from the car roof to depict whether the vehicle is slowing or accelerati­ng, has the potential to become a universal industry standard, the researcher­s said.

Ford set out to find “a way to replace the head nod or hand wave” to convey to pedestrian­s the intent of a driverless vehicle. 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 windscreen 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 signal slowing and stopping. – Daily Mail

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