About DBIS   | Story archive   | Contact DBIS  | DBIS home

Avoiding Rear-end Collisions

Human Factors Psychologists Study How to Avoid Rear-End Collisions

May 1, 2008

Psychologists studied the way a trailing driver reacts to a car braking directly in front of theirs and researchers developed an early warning system algorithm to prevent rear end crashes from occurring. They found that drivers cannot perceive the urgency of braking of the lead car and that this frequently leads to crashes.

read the full story...

Science Insider

COMPUTERS IN YOUR CAR: All modern cars have a computer, in charge of monitoring the various systems. This central computer receives information from a collection of sensors that monitor things like oxygen, air pressure, air temperature, and engine temperature, to name a few. Using this information, the computer can control the car's parts to get the best performance from the engine while keeping emissions low.

HOW DO SENSORS WORK? It depends on whether they are pressure sensitive or light sensitive. A pressure sensitive device can sense changes in pressure and emits an appropriate voltage in response to correct problems. These sorts of sensors are used in braking systems and collision avoidance systems, for example. Light-sensitive, or optical, sensors work very much like the wireless mouse technology in desktop computer systems. A small diode bounces light off a surface onto a sensor to form images. The sensor sends the data to a digital signal processor for analysis. This processor can detect patterns in the images and figure out how they have changed since the previous image it received from the sensor. Based on the changes in patterns over time, the processor can determine how far the mouse, or car, for example, has moved. It can then send electrical signals to the central computer to trigger the appropriate response.

OTHER NEW APPLICATIONS FOR SENSORS: Sensors can scan the precise position of the driver's eye level and adjust the seat accordingly. Newer prototype cars include infrared light enhancers to improve night vision, as well as rearview mirrors and rear bumper sensors to alert the driver when other vehicles are approaching the car's blind spot. Adaptive headlamps contain sensors that monitor a car's speed and steering wheel movements and adjust lighting accordingly. For example, at high speeds, light beams are given a longer reach. Remain-in-lane systems use forward-facing cameras to monitor the car's position in relation to the road's centerline and side marker lines for 20 meters ahead of the car. If the car begins to veer out of the lane, the sensors detect this and set off a warning sound.

The Human Factors and Ergonomics Society contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report.

Video help

Latest stories

  • A Satellite Named Violet and a Student Named Amanda
  • Behind the Scenes with the K-Team
  • Deep Space Discoveries
  • Dogs Fighting Cancer
  • Earthquake! What's Your Risk

More information on this story

To Go Inside This Science:
Human Factors and Ergonomics Society www.hfes.org
Santa Monica, CA 90406
310-394-1811

Nick Kelling
Georgia Institute of Technology        
404-385-4629 (office)
nicholas.kelling@psych.gatech.edu


© 2011 American Institute of Physics