Coming soon, an 'intelligent car' that talks you out of your road rage

thecheers.org    2008-05-11 10:41:54    
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Washington, May 11 : Soon, you will be able to drive a car that informs about an oncoming vehicle in your lane on a blind curve, improves your driving skills and starts a decent conversation to soothe your nerves when some jerk cuts you off.

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Soon, you will be able to drive a car that informs about an oncoming vehicle in your lane on a blind curve, improves your driving skills and starts a decent conversation to soothe your nerves when some jerk cuts you off.

Stanford professor Clifford Nass and his colleagues at the university's CarLab are figuring how to make vehicles collect information on where you drive, how fast you go, your preferences and to calm you down on a harried commute.

However, on the other side of it, the machine may also tell your insurance company how often you drive over the speed limit.

The technology could make you a better driver and even save you time and money - but it also could let insurers keep tabs on you and help advertisers reach right into your car.

"From the point of view of advertisers, the driver is a great captive audience. You have the ability of knowing where the person is, so you can have very location-specific advertising," Wired News quoted Nass, as saying.

But if advertisers know where you are, your insurance company will too. And that's where things get problematic.

"The insurance company could say, 'Look, you've been parking in high-risk areas. I'm going to raise your collision insurance,' or 'We've detected that you've been driving at 80 miles per hour; that will affect your liability rates.' So there are huge social issues about the car," he said.

Still, Nass stresses there's more to the technology than being spied on or pitched products.

Your car could recommend someplace to get a decent pizza, for example, and your insurance company would know you obey the speed limit and don't speed up for yellow lights and so cut you a break on your premium.

A thinking car also could make you a safer, happier driver. A large part of his research focuses on how a car's voice can influence your emotional state.

He believes that as the car of the future studies the driver's voice, facial expressions and emotional state using a camera and even blood pressure monitors in the steering wheel, it could change its tone to match your mood.

In other words, it'll know when you're about to blow your top because someone cut you off, and soothe your nerves with a friendly voice. (ANI)
© 2007 ANI

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