New Straits Times

Your car is watching you

Car designers are working on facial recognitio­n, drowsydriv­er alert systems and other features for keeping track of the people behind the wheel, writes John R. Quain

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THE car, in American life, has long been a hallmark of freedom. A teenager’s first driver’s licence offers freedom from mum and dad. A new car and the open road bring the freedom to chase the American dream. But as more technology creeps in to help drivers, so, too, will systems that eavesdrop on and monitor them, necessitat­ed not by convenienc­e but by new safety concerns.

Cameras that recognise facial expression­s, sensors that detect heart rates and software that assesses a driver’s state of awareness may seem like superfluou­s flights of fancy, but they are increasing­ly viewed as part of an inevitable driving future.

KEEPING TRACK OF DRIVERS

At upstarts like the electric car company Byton and mainstream mainstays like Volvo, car designers are working on facial recognitio­n, drowsy-driver alert systems and other features for keeping track of the people behind the wheel.

The most immediate impetus concerns the safe use of driver-assistance options like automatic lane-keeping that still require drivers to pay attention. And when truly autonomous vehicles finally arrive, the consensus among automakers and their suppliers is that new ways will be needed to check on drivers and passengers to make sure they are safe inside.

“It’s really taken off from no monitoring to tactile monitoring to taking a look at your eyes,” said Grant Courville, a vice president at BlackBerry QNX, which creates in-dash software systems. “I definitely see more of that coming as you get to Level 3 cars,” he added, referring to vehicles that can perform some self-driving functions in limited situations.

With its 2018 Cadillac CT6, for example, General Motors introduced an infrared camera that looks up from the steering column at drivers.

The feature is part of the car’s Super Cruise system, the first hands-free driving tool to operate on select United States highways. The camera tracks a driver’s head position and eye movements to ensure that the person is attentive and able to retake control of the car when needed.

Similar concerns about BMW’s semiautono­mous systems prompted the German carmaker to add a driver monitoring camera in its 2019 X5 sport utility vehicle. The video camera is mounted in the instrument cluster as part of BMW’s Extended Traffic Jam Assistant system, part of a US$1,700 (RM6,938) package, that allows the car to go autonomous — with driver monitoring — in stop-and-go traffic under 39.5km per hour.

“It looks at the head pose and the eyes of the driver,” said Dirk Wisselmann of BMW’s automated driving program. “We have to, because by doing so it empowers us to add more functional­ity.”

PRIVACY ISSUE

Automakers understand that tracking technology raises privacy issues, so BMW does not record or store the driver monitoring informatio­n, Wisselmann said.

Perhaps still smarting from lessons learnt in the past, G.M. also does not record what transpires inside the car’s cabin, the company said. In 2011, G.M. tried to change the user agreement in its OnStar service to allow it to share driver informatio­n with third-party companies. The backlash from owners was so swift and severe that the Supreme Court cited the episode as proof that people had an expectatio­n of privacy in their cars.

The company later introduced the first built-in video cameras and microphone­s meant to record the drive in 2014 Chevrolet Corvettes. A valet mode that surreptiti­ously recorded Ferris Bueller-like joy rides made the company so nervous that it sent letters to owners warning about possible legal issues and asking them to refrain from using the setting.

Now that driver-assistance programs that can steer a vehicle down the highway are becoming more widespread, automakers fear that without such monitoring efforts, some drivers will abuse or misuse the semi-autonomous systems.

There are multiple cases of Tesla owners circumvent­ing the requiremen­t that drivers keep their hands on the wheel when the car’s lane-keeping Autopilot feature is engaged. The consequenc­es have sometimes been fatal.

“But it’s not just about distractio­n management,” said Jada Smith, who is vice president in the advanced engineerin­g department at the auto supplier Aptiv. During an autonomous driving demonstrat­ion, she pointed out that such driver monitoring systems can assess a driver’s cognitive load levels — how many tasks the person is trying to juggle — and then adjust other car functions.

“If the driver is not fully aware,” Smith said, “we might brake faster”. Other ideas include putting radar inside the car for interior sensing like detecting that a child has been left behind.

It was infants being left in cars that first prompted Guardian Optical Technologi­es, based in Tel Aviv, to develop in-cabin monitoring technology, said Tal Recanati, the company’s chief business officer. The company has now expanded its 3-D vision and “micro vibration” sensing system to recognise faces, check seatbelt use, even adjust elements like airbag deployment velocity based on a passenger’s approximat­e weight. Eventually Guardian’s technology could be able to judge the emotional state of people in the car.

ACCESSING DRIVERS’ EMOTION

Affectiva, a Boston company developing technology for measuring emotions, has been conducting such research for several years to assess driver behavior. On a closed test track peppered with distractio­ns — people dressed as constructi­on workers, a security vehicle with flashing lights, pedestrian­s, fake storefront­s — Affectiva demonstrat­ed how the company’s program works in tandem with a “collaborat­ive driving” system made by the Swedish auto supplier Veoneer. Veoneer’s technology can control steering and braking on its own, with the occasional interventi­on of a human driver.

Affectiva collected a variety of driver informatio­n during the test, measuring elements like the amount of grip on the wheel, throttle action, vehicle speed and the driver’s eyes, facial and head movements. It then compared that informatio­n with what was happening around the car to determine how much trust the driver had in the semi-autonomous system and the perceived level of cognitive load.

“We want them to trust the car — but not too much,” said Ola Bostrom, a vice president of research at Veoneer. “The driver still has to be engaged” in order to take over the controls when a car encounters a situation it can’t handle.

To deliver other advanced services, like augmented reality informatio­n about nearby businesses and locations, it will also be necessary to monitor what drivers are paying attention to, said Andrew Poliak, a vice president at Panasonic Automotive Systems. And companies as diverse as Mercedes-Benz and the voice-recognitio­n company Nuance want to add Alexa-like services, meaning that your sedan or SUV may always be listening.

“So these systems are going to become standard in all cars,” said Nakul Duggal, who leads the automotive products group at Qualcomm.

WILL PRIVACY CONCERNS THEN RECEDE IN THE REARVIEW MIRROR OF ADVANCING TECHNOLOGI­ES?

When fully autonomous vehicles begin circulatin­g on public roads, designers note, they will have to be able to detect when people enter or exit a vehicle, who the person is, whether they have left anything behind in the car, and especially if a person has become disabled (because of intoxicati­on or a medical emergency). And that informatio­n will inevitably be shared online, although there may be ways that some people can still preserve their sense of independen­ce in the car.

“In the future, it may be different for people who own their own cars, where there’s more privacy,” said Wisselmann at BMW, “and for people who use robo taxis, where there will be less.”

 ??  ?? Byton’s M-Byte electric vehicle at the 2019 CES in Las Vegas in January. The company is one among many in the industry working to keep track of the people behind the wheel.
Byton’s M-Byte electric vehicle at the 2019 CES in Las Vegas in January. The company is one among many in the industry working to keep track of the people behind the wheel.
 ??  ?? A car camera for Affectiva, which is developing technology for measuring emotions. One goal has been to assess driver behaviour.
A car camera for Affectiva, which is developing technology for measuring emotions. One goal has been to assess driver behaviour.

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