Wednesday, 3 January 2018

Nissan's future cars will read your brain waves to make driving fun

Nissan Motor

The world's biggest carmakers and technology companies are spending billions of dollars to perfect your ability to drive without thinking. Nissan Motor Co is taking a different direction -- trying to "decode" your thinking so hands-on driving is more fun.

The Japanese company will unveil and test its "brain-to-vehicle" technology at next week's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. The "B2V" system requires a driver to wear a skullcap that measures brain-wave activity and transmits its readings to steering, acceleration and braking systems that can start responding before the driver initiates the action.

The driver still turns the wheel or hits the gas pedal, but the car anticipates those movements and begins the actions 0.2 seconds to 0.5 seconds sooner, said Lucian Gheorghe, a senior innovation researcher at Nissan overseeing the project. The earlier response should be imperceptible to drivers, he said.

"We imagine a future where manual driving is still a value of society," said Gheorghe, 40, who earned a doctorate in applied neural technology. "Driving pleasure is something as humans we should not lose."

Carmakers are working on ways to keep driving relevant as newcomers such as Alphabet Inc's Waymo and Apple Inc try to upend the industry with fully-autonomous technologies. IHS Markit expects 21 million autonomous vehicles to be sold annually by 2035 -- equivalent to about a quarter of all current vehicle sales.
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