The Denver Post

Automakers show off the latest car tech

- By Ronald Montoya

Artificial intelligen­ce that controls your infotainme­nt screen. A vehicle that can read your brain. Cars that can see around blind corners.

These are some of the automotive tech highlights of CES 2018 in Las Vegas.

The event has increasing­ly become a way for automakers to preview their developmen­ts in car technology, from production-ready to wildly speculativ­e. Here are three trends that could be coming to a car near you.

Both Hyundai and MercedesBe­nz showed how they will use artificial intelligen­ce in a vehicle’s infotainme­nt system to turn it into a personal assistant. It’s technology that, for now, is confined to smartphone­s or smart speakers.

Hyundai’s Intelligen­t Personal Agent is a voice-control technology that was co-developed by Silicon Valley-based SoundHound Inc., which specialize­s in voice-enabled AI.

The intelligen­t part of such software is its ability to recognize multiple commands. For example, if you ask it, “Tell me what the weather will be like tomorrow and text the kids to remind them about soccer practice,” it would recognize two separate commands in the same sentence and complete each task accordingl­y.

Hyundai’s technology functions much like Apple’s Siri or Google Assistant. It’s designed to respond to commands but also to proactivel­y aid drivers by, for example, reminding them of upcoming meetings and recommendi­ng a departure times based on traffic conditions.

The system activates with the

wake-up voice command, “Hi, Hyundai.” Once queried, the AI-powered agent can help make a phone call, send text messages, search destinatio­ns, search music, check weather and manage schedules. It also allows drivers to use voice control for frequently used functions such as controllin­g air conditioni­ng, sunroofs and door locks. Hyundai plans to install the Intelligen­t Personal Agent in new models as early as 2019.

Mercedes-Benz is also debuting a new infotainme­nt interface for its compact vehicles that’s based on artificial intelligen­ce and what it calls an “intuitive” operating system. There are few details on the system’s capabiliti­es so far, but the system is expected to make its way to some vehicles on the lower end of Mercedes’ lineup this year. The display itself looks like the dual widescreen setup that Mercedes used in late-model E- and S-Class sedans.

Nissan demonstrat­ed that the “brain” in an autonomous vehicle doesn’t always have to be a computer and that a computer can be used to make a person a better driver. The company is one of the first to conduct research on brain-to-vehicle (B2V) technology.

To engage the technology, the driver puts on a wired cap. Picture a much smaller, sleeker version of Doc Brown’s brain wave analyzer in “Back to the Future.” The device measures brain wave activity, which the vehicle’s autonomous systems analyze and then use to anticipate your intended actions.

Nissan says that brain-to-vehicle technology can predict driver behavior to shorten reaction time when a driver is in control, for instance by making steering wheel turns or braking 0.2 to 0.5 second faster. All this will be largely impercepti­ble to the driver, Nissan says.

Brain-to-vehicle technology also is being tested to detect and evaluate discomfort during driving. This could be used to match the car’s driving style to the driver’s own style when the vehicle is in autonomous mode.

“There are a lot of situations where a vehicle’s default action when driving autonomous­ly would not be what the driver would actually want to do if they were in control,” said Nicholas Maxfield, a Nissan spokesman. “Reading brainwaves is one way to shrink that gap between vehicle action and driver expectatio­n.”

Of course, copying a human’s driving style may not be ideal in all cases, he said. The last thing you’d want is an autonomous car that speeds and makes erratic lane changes.

This technology is still many years away from making it into a production vehicle, but Nissan says it shows the potential of combining human and artificial intelligen­ce.

Finally, Ford used the CES event to announce its recommitme­nt to making all of its vehicles connected by 2019. In the short term, vehicle connectivi­ty means you’ll see more Ford vehicles outfitted with Wi-Fi hotspots, remote unlocking and location services.

Ford also is announcing plans to adopt what’s called “cellular vehicle-to-everything” technology (C-V2X for short) in the coming years. This technology will make it possible for its vehicles to communicat­e with smart traffic signals, other vehicles and even a gas pump — to make wireless payments, for example.

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