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March 2006

Wireless Highway

With sensors in cars and transponders on poles, networked-car safety research is hitting the road.

By Peter Dizikes

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A few months ago in Michigan, a sedan, followed by a minivan -- both rigged out with prototype wireless communications equipment and software -- swung onto Halsted Road in Farmington Hills. The driver of the sedan then slammed on his brakes, as if a dog had run in front of his bumper. This is the kind of abrupt move that can cause a rear-end crash, especially when visibility is poor.

But this particular sedan had a computer in its trunk outfitted with a Global Positioning System receiver and a short-range radio. The abrupt brake-jamming registered on the computer, which broadcast a warning and the sedan's GPS location. The minivan, similarly equipped, picked up the warning via special radio frequency, calculated that the sedan's location was just ahead of its own, and warned the driver, sounding a chime and flashing a red light.

The vehicles were testing Motorola communications technology as part of a corporate and government push to blanket roads with wirelessly broadcast safety information over the next decade, saving lives by getting cars' computers to talk to each other. To be sure, communications-driven auto safety features have been envisioned for years. But Motorola's tests are part of a new wave of projects that are using such technology in actual vehicles, on public roads, for the first time. "There are possibilities for information exchange that hitherto were only imagined," says James Misener, program leader in transportation safety research at the University of California, Berkeley.

[For an illustration of a wireless highway safety test click here.]

One reason for that explosion of possibilities is that late-model cars are already loaded with sensors. Computers in today's cars track dozens of driving parameters, like when antilock braking systems are activated, the rate of deceleration, and when temperatures near the road surface near freezing. This kind of data could help other cars avoid hazards -- and each other -- if shared in the right ways.

For example, in Southfield, MI, the state Department of Transportation has outfitted light poles at intersections with transponders made by Azulstar, the wireless-networking firm. These gadgets can broadcast a traffic light's GPS position and its state: red, yellow, or green. Approaching cars equipped with prototype computers can examine this data, together with information on speed and location, and alert drivers who seem likely to run red lights.

And as part of the Motorola project, transponders housed in small gray boxes have been affixed to light poles along several kilometers of local streets in Farmington Hills. The roadside radio units have a range of 1.6 kilometers. Vehicles could collaborate with transponders to relay data across long distances to give drivers farther afield advance notice about conditions ranging from bad weather to dangerous road conditions to accidents.

While 10 states plan to participate in similar tests, Michigan says its roads will soon have the largest number of specially equipped vehicles and roadside transponders. Later this year, Chrysler will outfit a batch of cars with autonomous communication systems and test them itself in Auburn Hills and Southfield.

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March/April 2006

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Comments

  • hi
    Guest (angelie joy deroca) on 03/13/2006 at 12:00 AM
    Posts:
    1
    i would like to request the discussion about the characters?
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • How many will buy
    Guest (Sundararajan Srinivasan) on 03/18/2006 at 12:00 AM
    Posts:
    1
    This is actually a good idea. But I am still apprehensive about how many people would like themselves to be continuosly tracked by somebody.
    http://sunnyeves.blogspot.com
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • traffic fatalities !!!
    Guest (J. Liard) on 03/18/2006 at 12:00 AM
    Posts:
    1
    I'm from Québec where people like to drive as much as the Americans. Why is the fatality rate for the US worse than in my province? 1/6250 vs 1/10300. Is it a question of density?
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • Human Factors - Risk Comfort Level
    Guest (Jim) on 03/21/2006 at 12:00 AM
    Posts:
    1
    Make cars safer and drivers take more risks. There is a risk comfort level that everyone works up to, no matter what we do.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • I had conceptualized this idea two years back
    Guest (Kishore Babu) on 04/27/2006 at 12:00 AM
    Posts:
    1
    Hey, this design looks costly and cannot be implemented very easily in every car. Instead of using GPS and other sophisticated equipment, why not use a transmitter that transmits a particular code and receiver in the car that can receive the transmitted signal and decode the same and alert the driver. If anyone needs more information on the design, you can mail me at kishore.gaddam@ge.com
    Rate this comment: 12345
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