Driverless cars: Researcher disguises himself as car seat in study

Date:

A study to test people’s reactions to driverless cars has used a “ghost driver” to record their responses.

The work, by the University of Nottingham, found that, in the absence of someone in the driving seat, pedestrians trust certain visual prompts more than others when deciding whether to cross the road.

As part of the study, a car was driven around the university’s campus over several days with its driver – research fellow David R. Large – concealed in the driver’s seat.

Mr Large, senior research fellow with the Human Factors Research Group at the university, said: “We wanted to explore how pedestrians would interact with a driverless car and developed this unique methodology to explore their reactions.”

Video journalist: Alex Thorp

Follow BBC East Midlands on Facebook, on Twitter, or on Instagram. Send your story ideas to [email protected].

Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

More like this
Related

BrechtFest celebrates German revolutionary Bertolt Brecht | Entertainment/Life

A little Mardi Gras, a little mirth, a little...

Why employees smuggle AI into work

Sean McManusTechnology Reporter.Trimble provides software and hardware to manage...